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I'm sorry, I'll read that again: Here are the news.
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I'm and sorry
While she was struggling to get her skirt down and get on her feet again, Jack ran over, offered her his hand and said, `` Gosh, I'm sorry, Miss Langford.
But I'm not one damned bit sorry I went out to question the people I know in the places they hang around, and '' --
Every library borrower, or at least those whose taste goes beyond the five-cent fiction rentals, knows what it is to hear the librarian say apologetically, `` I'm sorry, but we don't have that book.
To them especially the librarians, with the help of co-ops, hope they will never have to say, `` I'm sorry, we don't have that book ''.
" I'm feeling sorry for this guy that I pressed to shock / He gets the answers wrong I have to up the watts / And he begged me to stop but they told me to go / I pressed the buzzer.
I'm and I'll
I'm still not convinced, though, I'll have to see more of him before predicting that big year for him.
I'll bet he wouldn't be pleased if a rumdum like me were to ask his daughter for a date -- I mean, after I'm out of the hospital, a month or so from now ''.
`` I feel good physically '', Hansen added, `` but I think I'll move better carrying a little less weight than I'm carrying now ''.
I'm now going to ... I plan to begin a process of making one personal movie after another and if something leads me back to look at that, which I'm sure it might, I'll see what makes sense to me.
She tells Rhett tearfully, " I'm afraid I'll die and go to hell ," to which Rhett replies, " Maybe there isn't a hell.
Chapman also contributed sketches to the BBC radio series I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again and television programmes such as The Illustrated Weekly Hudd ( starring Roy Hudd ), Cilla Black, This is Petula Clark, and This Is Tom Jones.
The lyrics to the song, " Tooling for Anus ", by 80s Detroit hardcore band, The Meatmen, explicitly states " I'm not a fag and I'll never be, afraid to hit the can to take a pee, afraid some sissy'll grab my ass, I'll stick his face with broken glass "
Bill Oddie wrote a song about Wolstenholme for the BBC radio comedy show I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again which includes the lines: " I'm going Wolsten-home / And you can't get Wolsten ( worse than ) him!
In the UK, it moved to stage performances by Cambridge Footlights, such as Beyond the Fringe and A Clump of Plinths ( which evolved into Cambridge Circus ), to radio, with such shows as It's That Man Again and I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again, then to television, with such shows as Monty Python's Flying Circus and Not the Nine O ' Clock News.
I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again ( often abbreviated ISIRTA ) was a BBC radio comedy programme which originated from the Cambridge University Footlights revue Cambridge Circus.
The title of the show comes from a sentence commonly used by BBC newsreaders following an on-air flub: " I'm sorry, I'll read that again.
The cast occasionally ask for one (" thank you ma ' am, I'll take the OBE if it's offered ") or decline one that's been offered (" no thanks, I'm trying to give them up ").
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