Example sentences of "'ve [adv] [vb pp] [pers pn] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | They 've mostly brought me unhappiness . |
2 | So they 've obviously given you instructions on how |
3 | Aye , she says what they 're getting Sheila , she said I 've just cut me hours down they , they were working thirty nine and they 've cut me down to thirty two , just like part-time thing , like you know |
4 | I 've just had me house decorated and I 'm seriously thinking of becoming a serial killer of bleeding workmen , I think they 're a bleeding disgrace . |
5 | wife 's had , wife 's even poorer , I 've been er , I 've just finished them antibiotics on er yesterday morning |
6 | I 've already told you Lori is just someone I know , and has nothing to do with any of this , ’ she countered . |
7 | I 've not seen it mummy , I 've not seen it at all . |
8 | I 've not got me bronzie . |
9 | The , they really convert bibles for doing that is because I 've always done that of er right that 's , that 's out of the way , jump the paperwork , now what about talking about your clubs and that t to sort of close down the call and relax the client for getting into referral mode and I 've always done it tail end on so the introduction to the referral is at the beginning and perhaps looking for them during i is totally unfamiliar , I mean I do note the odd thing as I go through and note them down on the , the but I 'd never been used to actually although we were told referrals how and why that went with it . |
10 | You 've always called me Emma . ’ |
11 | certain extent , you 've totally transformed it Barry . |
12 | That 's the last thing you 've ever done you cunt . |
13 | ‘ I see a lot more than you 've ever given me credit for ! ’ he retorted curtly . |
14 | I can imagine there 'll be one or two unhappy people if they find out I 've even taken you walkies let alone tried to help you plug the blueness into reality . |
15 | I 've certainly seen it sort of as a viable alternative for larger vehicles , you know , buses and this sort of thing . |
16 | Secondly , in an exchange like the following ( from Lyons , 1977a : 668 ) : ( 94 ) A : I 've never seen him B : That 's a lie the pronoun that does not seem to be anaphoric ( unless it is held that it refers to the same entity that A 's utterance does , i.e. a proposition or a truth value ) ; nor does it quite seem to be discourse-deictic ( it refers not to the sentence but , perhaps , to the statement made by uttering that sentence ) . |
17 | They 've never called me Harry since that time . |
18 | and I 've never washed it hand wash it . |
19 | If he 's trusted me I 've never asked him to , and I 've never promised him fealty . |