Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] ever " in BNC.

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1 Their very weakness , their distance from practical affairs , and their isolation made them ever more extreme .
2 You ruined them for me , and I have hated them ever since .
3 I do n't think I ever been so happy .
4 I do n't think I ever saw J[ack] work more than half an hour without the cry of ‘ Barboys ! ’ — ‘ Coming , dear ! ’ , down would go the pen , and he would be away perhaps five minutes , perhaps half an hour ; possibly to do nothing more important than stand by the kitchen range as scullery maid .
5 I do n't think I ever opened the score .
6 I do n't think I ever gave him a wrong 'un , though .
7 All sorts of people held their hands out to me but I do n't think I ever got anything .
8 After a while she shrugged her shoulders and said , ‘ You know , I do n't think I ever was really committed to Christianity . ’
9 She readily admits that she did so deliberately : ‘ I do n't think I ever really believed he would stay with me unless we had a child .
10 ‘ It 's terribly sad but I do n't think I ever really loved her , either .
11 I do n't think I ever saw it .
12 Part of me did n't think I ever would , part of me disapproved , part of me was a little scared , to tell the truth .
13 And he was looking forward again : " I do n't feel I 've ever got to the point I aim at and I do n't think I ever will , but I would like to feel that I was getting a little nearer to it each time . "
14 I do n't think I ever saw a nude woman in the house — certainly there were women in various states of undress … but never nude . "
15 I do n't think I ever moved so fast in all my life .
16 I had to conform ; I do not think I ever used the term in my reports , except in parenthesis to denote a sort of dirty word .
17 I do n't think I ever I have ever anything out of the city at all .
18 He he very rarely played truant a boy did n't it 's er in fact I er I do n't think I ever did , to my knowledge played truant at all during school .
19 I do n't think I ever met a refined man before .
20 We got our ration books — for us and the cattle-food as well — but I do n't think I ever worried about the possibility of Hitler invading us .
21 But I do n't think I ever seriously considered having Low Birk Hatt connected when they offered it to me .
22 But er , know I , I do n't think I ever heard anybody think about it or say anything about a , an air raid like , you know .
23 Yes , right to , to and , and you could even go on farther , but I do n't think I ever went any further I did n't have time .
24 Er I remember it so vividly because it , at our house it was quite er an event because mother and father were so Labour and my brother , who erm he , I do n't know why , he 's not alive today and I ca n't so I , and I 've no idea , I do n't think I ever asked him because I 'd be too young , but I do know that the friction was in the house because he was working for the Conservative and she was the first woman that we ever elected er she , this , this lady did .
25 I do n't think I ever caught up with it .
26 ‘ No , I do n't think I ever looked inside .
27 I do n't think I ever talked about them to anyone . ’
28 ‘ Well , I do n't think I ever really knew that .
29 ‘ I do n't think I ever heard of him , ’ Agnes said .
30 ‘ I do n't think I ever knew her last name .
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