Example sentences of "[that] when i [verb] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 In fact , I told him that when I got back from this holiday he must come round and have a meal .
2 I know that when I get out I 'll make something of myself this time . ’
3 I always eat well at university at lunch time , including a pudding , because I know that when I get home I will have to eat minute quantities .
4 It 's significant that when I get home at night and want to listen to a record for pleasure I usually choose a disc made over 30 years ago — the message survives the medium to an astonishing extent in the best old records .
5 ‘ I read so much at work that when I get home I just want to watch Jeremy Beadle ! ’
6 So that when I get home I can say that 1 did it . ’
7 I 'll tell him that when I get back in .
8 And , of course , I realise that when I bring forward proposals they will have to be judged on their merits .
9 I was so struck with the place that when I came back to Le Court I told John that he ought to go there for a visit .
10 I was so purified and uplifted that when I came out and discovered my car had been towed away and I 'd have to fork out 70 quid , I was completely unruffled .
11 I 'm sure that when I came out of the room I was staggering , and instinctively I pawed at my mouth .
12 Could he honestly believe that when I went off to work at nine o'clock each morning I was really heading for some regular-as-clockwork day-long love-nest ?
13 All I know is that when I went out this morning I found the poor little thing , run over .
14 In preparing my speech I recalled ( as the reader also may ) the occasion during my first watch in Tartar when the first lieutenant had shown me the various instruments on the bridge , and that when I asked why one had a canvas cover , he had said , ‘ Oh , that 's the Mountbatten station-keeping gear , and we keep it covered because the captain finds it quite useless . ’
15 I 'm afraid that when I dropped out of sight it created a great deal of concern in the village .
16 I surveyed the scene around me and vowed that when I grew up I would marry a rich man who would carry me away from all this noise and squalor .
17 I really I really do wish it was that simple and I wish that when I pick up The Star on a Thursday or one of the other local papers that I did n't read in it the twenty cars that 's broken into and and all the other problems and I say to myself now why did that happen .
18 Now it would maybe not be appropriate if there was to be an alternative government bill that would deal with these type of matters er in front of us and please to say that when I read out the list of sponsors , it 'll be shown there are people from all parties , or all parties in Britain in this house , who are true democrats .
19 ‘ You 're saying then that when I walk out of the church I 'm on my own . ’
20 I can go home now and again to stay with my sister , and Newbury Council have said that when I come back into circulation they 'd be willing to find me another place , and hopefully I 'll find a little job .
21 And you know and I know that when I come home after a nice relentless day at the rehearsal rooms , it will look like Versailles , Southfork and Designers Guild rolled into one .
22 Fear that I have only dreamed of moving forward , that when I go in and face it I will see that it is a mistake , not possible , uninteresting .
23 er so I thought oh I 'll change that when I go in to er the greengrocers .
24 As a general practitioner from Northern Ireland , do you recommend that when I go back home tonight I put Eminase in my bag ?
25 ‘ Joe knows that when I do n't train with the lads I do extra training on my own .
26 And then you thought that when I found out — which I did n't , I hasten to add — I came to blackmail you , for money — or acceptance .
27 Indeed one of my personal invariable rules is that when I have mentally decided that something can not be done , for what appears to be a very good reason , I test that apparent constraint , hopefully to destruction .
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