Example sentences of "i had been [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I just wish I had been a man , that 's all .
2 Last time I had been a fool enough to close French doors and knew they were there only frantic moments later , when I saw blood spatter my wrists and hands , like a fly buzzing , like a bird beating against the see-through reality .
3 I explained that I had not entered at the right time because I had been a hostage in Iraq .
4 And I knew I had been a child when I first came to live with him .
5 He had been curled up there , dead in his basket , since I had been a child in a velvet-collared coat .
6 I think it was his fourth , but as I had been a child during this proliferation of fiancées I was n't certain .
7 Mr Singh , a Kenyan Asian , confessed to me , after I had been a friend of the family for several years , that he was neither fluent in Swahili , the language of his education up to 13 , nor in Punjabi , his mother tongue .
8 I had been a gang leader in Harehills — first administering the lives of younger children , then by brass , bossiness and imagination extending judgement even over older boys .
9 In the early days I had been a bit disappointed that the NUJ had n't immediately leapt to John 's defence , but ever since I had first been to see the General Secretary , Harry Conroy , and his assistant , Tom Nash , the union had done what it could to respond to what was asked of them .
10 I had been a vessel of pure water and I had been spilled .
11 If I had been a marquis , I felt , I would still have been in bed or perhaps just parting the curtains and peering out to see what kind of day it was But Lord Hulton worked all the time , just about as hard as any of his men .
12 In any case , it is too difficult for me , and I wish I had been a movie comedian or something of the sort and had never heard of physics ’ .
13 So I had been a visitor , and an occasional attender at the X-ray Department , but all that was spread over many years .
14 I had been a thing of firm , clear outlines ; now I seemed to splay out in all directions and to have assumed a shape , thanks to undue accretions of flesh , which bore no relation to the person I believed to exist within it .
15 I had been an animal , not a reflective human being .
16 By the time I had been an intern for a few more months , doing my rounds in my white coat with stethoscope dangling round my neck ( and feeling very important ) , Father had had to close down the second branch , leaving — for the time being — only the original shop which he had opened near the Market Place where the annual Goose Fair was held .
17 I could see she was an unfit woman , and although I was resolved not to tell anyone now of my qualifications , except that I had been an ARP worker , I did try to be as helpful to her as I could .
18 I had been the head of Birkenhead Institute for nearly ten years : a time during which great changes had been introduced , some successful , some less so .
19 The way he wrote it , I guessed he was as sure as anyone that I had been the trigger man .
20 I began to wonder whether or not I had been the victim of an extended delusion , which was perhaps the function of an overheated adolescence leading to some kind of psycho-hormonal explosion .
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