Example sentences of "i [verb] [pers pn] at the " in BNC.

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1 Started with this device this is the thing I made it at the grammar school when I was working there .
2 Course , I 'ad to 'ang about a bit until I saw yer go out , and afterwards I met 'im at the Elephant an' Castle .
3 When I met her at the airport after she flew in to London from Los Angeles recently , I caught my breath when I saw her because she just looked so lovely .
4 He thrust his hands deep into his pockets , hunching his shoulders as he continued , ‘ I met her at the party I threw to celebrate taking over control of the company .
5 I met him at the Labour Club .
6 ‘ My name is Lockwood , ’ I said , when I met him at the gate to his house .
7 I met them at the same time , ’ Tim recalls .
8 " I got mine at the cut price place at the end of the Queenstown Road . "
9 One this girl traced my hand and I traced hers at the same time — I went very slowly , which triggered her ticklishness , and she laughed every time my pencil made it to the place between two of her fingers , but she was brave , she stayed put .
10 So that 's se and I want you at the other end .
11 As I told her at the time there were several possibilities . ’
12 Erm , thought it would be nice at handicrafts afternoon and then we could throw the handicraft meeting open to anybody if I told them at the meeting before were going to have it .
13 Well I mean , I told them at the time I was against the of a sixteen month deal .
14 Christ Almighty , I told you at the time , did n't I ?
15 I told you at the fair — it 's out of your hands .
16 I told you at the time to stick out and then she would have to get a housekeeper in .
17 I told you at the beginning how it would be .
18 I identified her at the mortuary not an hour since . ’
19 I do n't think he meant it , looking back , but I believed him at the time .
20 But I put it at the bottom of the list and consider it can really be done without .
21 Erm , well I put it at the .
22 The point is that tonight — Magnapop 's UK debut — is peppered with punky teenage licks and festering grungy rumbles , yet just as one expects lyrics concerning death , drinking and corporate rock shagging , Linda hops , hiccups and beams , ‘ Wo n't you let me walk you home from school ? /Can I meet you at the pool ? ’
23 I telephoned him at the shipping company , but was told that he was not in the office .
24 ‘ My father and eldest brother established an estate agency and I joined them at the age of 17 .
25 She indicated the pretty flower-patterned basin for me to wash my hands in , then I joined them at the table .
26 Ludo and I hear it at the same moment .
27 I began to see the nervousness in your eyes whenever I got too close to you , and when I kissed you at the inn I knew that Matilda had lied about one point at least .
28 Yes , that 's how I perceived it at the time , but I was wrong .
29 I ordered it at the branch of the Times Library then housed in Elliston and Cavell 's , the nearest equivalent to Harrods in the Oxford of pre-war years , and remember with what excitement I received it from their admirable librarian Miss Lush ( now Lady Ormerod ) at the end of my day 's work in the Bodleian .
30 I sensed it at the funeral .
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