Example sentences of "'re [vb pp] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Residents from the homes do n't always find themselves welcome in other pubs , but here they 're treated as just another customer .
2 Make them feel that they 're treated as different .
3 Except that you 're regarded as eccentric — is that right ?
4 You may have problems with work — although many women are entitled to full maternity leave , they are actually expected to be back at work in eight to ten weeks , otherwise they 're regarded as lacking in commitment .
5 Though they 're common enough in Britain , they 're regarded as very exotic in the Ukraine and the visitors could n't get enough of them !
6 Then the fortunate staff who are still employed and they 're regarded as fortunate that you 've still got a job , because that 's what the management use repeatedly to professional people like nurses , sisters and other professional organizations who work within the Health Service , you 're very lucky to have a job .
7 Yeah well b well what I 'm trying to say and I ca n't emphasise it too strongly is that I do n't want anybody going round like writing another stupid letter to somebody saying that erm you know the reason we 're inundated that it has n't been advertised properly cos I tell you what it 'll come back right in our faces cos it 's our bloody fault Well that 's right well we know that I mean I told them all I told them all quite clearly when I was up in Glasgow that they 'd be quiet for at least a month because p it 'll take time to filter through .
8 Given that he does n't want to see you and your suspicion is that he does n't want to see you because you have as it were the fingerprints of Gerry Adams on you now you 're tainted because of your relationship with Gerry Adams , what do you now do ?
9 We 're buggered as well but we 're
10 She realized she had missed an opportunity to needle Brian and went on , ‘ Tim says drop-outs are the fault of a cynical and uncompassionate administration who 're buggered if they 're going to waste good money on a load of lunatics , so they 've slung them out and turned the asylums into conference centres for advertising agencies . ’
11 We 're realised that integration will also make timetabling much easier .
12 Probably it was simply one of those things that happen , or that you think happen , when you 're smashed and half-asleep .
13 ‘ Look — it 's hard to explain clearly when you 're shattered but yesterday I thought you were a ghoul .
14 He paused during a hectic sightseeing tour of London to add : ‘ We 're shattered but having a great time . ’
15 ‘ You 're bruised as anyting .
16 Soon after your arrival you 're interviewed and put on what 's called ‘ house assessment ’ — house cleaning for the first five weeks — whilst the screws work out what would be the best work for you .
17 Instant dismissal if they 're caught as well .
18 do n't forget when they 're added when they 're added you can do them one bit at a time .
19 you 're scuppered before you 've even started .
20 I doubt very much whether they 'll be given any opportunity to voice what happens to them when they 're transferred or what happens to the fund .
21 We 've , the protest succeeded in focusing a spotlight on this northern test site where the Soviets hope to continue nuclear testing after their own people stopped them in Khazakstan They 're rattled and they 're angry with us , and now they 're punishing us by preventing us from having direct communication with our friends and finding out that they 're safe and well .
22 They 're done because the old-fashioned way of doing a , putting something together is a paste-up job , you 've got all these stories filed about all sorts of things , and then some editorial chap or chapess sits down with sort of paste and scissors and cuts the things off , and they tend to cut things off the bottom to make it all fit until it feels about right .
23 Stoessl says : ‘ The inquiry does n't have to justify the polls , but to look into the way they 're done and try to explain the discrepancies .
24 I 've done the wind parts for that , they 're they 're done and copied .
25 I do n't I 've no idea if they 're adopted or not .
26 There 's something about the way they 're built and their atmosphere that prevents places like Staithes and Whitby slipping overboard from picturesque to grotesque .
27 They 're built and designed by Southern Electric and will shuttle between the railway station and the city centre .
28 The first one is visual and auditory discrimination — now there 's lovely bits of jargon for you — that means the ability to differentiate between symbols when they 're written and to differentiate between different sounds , particularly highly frequency sounds .
29 They 'll be used to provide emergency treatment for British troops if they 're injured while on convoy protection duty in Bosnia .
30 But do n't expect your travel insurance to pay up unless you 're injured or get your luggage damaged in the storms .
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