Example sentences of "i have [vb pp] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'd buzzed off one , but the rest I found hard to remember .
2 Once I 'd broken into this solicitor 's and all there was there was this big safe , y'know the type I mean , a big square box that was on this big slab of polished wood .
3 I 'd hoped for personal service , ’ said Giles .
4 I saw it twice , the second time to see what I 'd missed through racked sobs the first time .
5 I thought I 'd gone to all that trouble to lure you into my net , sort out the money , only to send you back into his arms .
6 Actually , I had fun inventing my own diet because I had gone on diets before , I 'd gone to fat farms , too , but it had never lasted .
7 The only time I 've ever frozen in an exam was when I 'd gone for three exams solid without kip , one after the other , and I just brain and the other ones were a real struggle and I had to graft my marks out of solid granite y'know I was chiselling away .
8 She looked me up and down and adjusted my tie an inch or so ( I 'd gone for green silk and I now had two ties ) , then said :
9 Oh I , I 'd gone over several times , oh yes .
10 I 'd gone through three packets of tissues from the canteen , and a flunkey had been dispatched to Underwoods to buy me a large box of Men 's Size .
11 Actually I wish I 'd gone like this years ago cos you get
12 I 'd said after all I 've had done to me I said you 've caught 'em , I 'll prosecute .
13 I did n't really blame you for not wanting me to come near you , but it was n't a particularly pleasant experience to realise that I 'd put someone I 'd loved through such an appalling time .
14 as a pension , so if I 'd retired at that point , and then worked part time
15 I 'd retired by this time .
16 Then they said well and then I realised that it was Fennite and I 'd heard of that
17 Maybe I was just a provincial or something , but I began to see that I was among the strangest audience I 'd seen in that place .
18 I 'd ridden over many jumps before , but never on a racehorse , never fast , never caring so much about the outcome .
19 ‘ About some stolen property , ’ said the other , who , I 'd decided by this time , had shifty eyes .
20 But erm after I 'd choked for half an hour she went to sleep I eventually went back to sleep again and
21 Now that the little spot of reality I 'd made in this mean city has been so lightly abandoned by those I 'd thought it would be safe with — but you wo n't catch me compromising with the lackeys .
22 I might have felt a little downcast at that point , only the evening had made me feel more encouraged about my prospects with her than I 'd felt for some time .
23 The welcome from son and wife was the first warmth I 'd felt in seven days .
24 I had to apply for access — access to my own daughter who I 'd lived with all her life .
25 On a taxi ride across the Clyde Valley — Hamilton , Motherwell , Wishaw going with my father to the psychiatric hospital where my mother had just been admitted , I was overwhelmed by the past , not just the place names that had filled my childhood when I 'd lived in this part of Scotland over twenty years before , but another past to which I had even less access : a prelude to my own .
26 I 'd stood near that very spot with a chum and rejoiced at Wilson 's victory .
27 If I 'd paused for more thought I perhaps would n't have had the nerve , but I simply opened his door , checked up and down the corridor for observers ( none ) and went inside , shutting myself in .
28 Up until now there had n't been a peep out of the former Jam bassist which I 'd attributed to one of three things — shyness , boredom or a reluctance to interrupt his new boss who , it has to be said , makes Ian Paisley seem like a Trappist Monk when he gets into his stride .
29 Adopted just five weeks ago ‘ I 'd tried for other seats but had n't got anywhere ’ he has been staying in Northallerton with Jim Stafford , the cheery and down to earth constituency agent .
30 Suddenly , the cafe stopped being the place where I worked and once again it became the bizarre oasis that I 'd happened upon all those months earlier .
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