Example sentences of "very often [subord] " in BNC.

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1 it 's reported in the press very often before it comes to the committee
2 We would n't go in at a , I would n't go in at all , but Stuart 's mum used to live right opposite and she likes to go in occasionally cos she sees all her old friends , she do n't see them very often so she likes to go in and see all her old friends , otherwise I do n't
3 The letter O , for instance , does not occur very often as the final letter in a four letter word , but is common as the second letter .
4 I wo n't feel ‘ complete ’ until we have at least one more baby — but I dare n't bring up the subject very often as my husband just gets more and more adamant .
5 They each had a radiator beside their beds , and very often when I was on night duty J. would return to bed very late ( or should I say early ? ) , after having been sitting with me in the Met Office , drinking coffee , chatting and so forth .
6 The chamber is reasonably sized , which means that it does n't have to be emptied very often when used for small d-i-y tasks , and it will also clean up after bigger jobs such as wood planing .
7 Very often when people are under stress these very important relaxing activities get squeezed out of the weekly timetable .
8 Very often when individuals are under stress the very activities that they should endeavour to keep in their weekly timetable get squeezed out or avoided .
9 Again the fact that you buy a single package very often when you go overseas .
10 From experience and there are also the occasions very often when you 're , if you like , force fed .
11 And we used to arrange football teams , cricket teams , during the before you went into school , playtime and very often when you came out of school .
12 Er very often when they were trying to do things .
13 This sort of thing happens very often when a new data.processing system is to be installed to fulfil a particular task .
14 So it seems to be about school anxiety and exam anxieties and so , but those are very common kinds of dreams , but , but very often when you you find they 're actually about the present , they 're about some recurrent anxiety or conflict in the present which is masquerading as if it were in the past because your associations of what 's going on are connected with the past er one way or another .
15 Maybe erm maybe our culture has particular metaphors , particular ways of understanding ways of human distress and it seems that very often when people have a rather non-specific distress these days , I mean it 's very common to find that erm counsellors , professionals , will be looking in into people 's backgrounds , looking into people 's backgrounds for evidence of child sex abuse .
16 You know , very often when you go from one country to another you go through an area of re , what is called no man 's land , you come through from one frontier and then you 've got a distance and you come to the next frontier that does n't exist as far as accepting or rejecting Christ is concerned .
17 And very often if anybody was killing a pig or anything , I 'd always get a piece of erm pork something like that .
18 and er , very often if you knew somewhat , you know , obviously modern it would , it would spoil it because you 're there
19 we always use at least three for a piano because although two men can lift them very often if you 're going round awkward corners it helps to have a third person s to steady them .
20 If you take erm Depends on the shape of them , but very often if you put a piece of newspaper round and then face the corner of one into the into you could put one into the bottom of the next and do it in a square .
21 It was then that choreographers turned their attention to music already available , very often because financial difficulties prevented any approach being made to a living composer .
22 Some of the listed newcomers may not sell as well as the established names mentioned beneath them , but they are there very often because publishers are promoting them heavily , and I have tried to pick the best of these .
23 ‘ I am a fairly lonely person — I do have friends but I do n't get to see them very often because of my unsociable shift work .
24 There were n't any houses then and there was a big ditch where the canal side and erm we used to have to wait for each other , because no street lamps , nothing at all like that and er really we used to be afraid and then when the first bus ran , shall I tell you this , when the first bus ran from , from Bloxwich to Willenhall of course word got around that the buses were beginning , because the roads were only ruts , they were n't tarmacked roads then and it was certainly gentlemen first for the first there were about three hundred waiting that was a lot of at the top is it Street , I think it 's that and all the gentlemen were first but we , some of us managed to scramble on , but erm then they used to break down very very often because the roads the roads were in such a terrible condition they were only ruts .
25 In practice , this action is not likely to be taken very often because it may have undesirable disruptive effects on the financial system .
26 I think that very often where Bentham and Beccaria differ in detail this is traceable to Beccaria 's conviction that what may be done in the name of utility should be limited by consideration of what befits the dignity of man .
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