Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] 're [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And they had a double box for three pounds six or something and there are what at Woolies they 're about three fifty six so you 're saving fifty P .
2 So you s you s you 're saying so you 're saying some kind of actual
3 So you 're spotting that pattern .
4 So we 're watching that programme , Is this Your Last Cigarette ? or whatever it were called last Sunday on the telly and I thought I 'm stupid cos in six month 's time I shall say I could have packed up six months ago .
5 P C Q so we 're measuring this angle here .
6 So they 're spending three pounds
7 What Pomerance and others are attempting to do is to operationalise definitions for proximity , similarity , closure and those type of measures and then they 're seeing whether or not they 're using visual processing time or decision task or attention task to as v as ways of investigating the similarity or otherwise Take this one off or ?
8 So in fact one of the things that you Cos usually you 're given more points here so you can get a nice curve on both sides so you get a nice Do n't go from there to there straight across .
9 IBM Corp 's personal computer business was around the break-even level or may have been profitable in the first three months of this year , the president of IBM Personal Computer Co Robert Corrigan told the New York Times : he says he thinks ‘ people will be surprised at how quickly we 're bringing this business back , ’ and that it should be solidly profitable before year-end ; problem is that its closest rivals , Compaq Computer Corp and Dell Computer Corp , which both faced the same problems as IBM , adjusted to the change in the market much more quickly , and rushed appropriate machines out while IBM procrastinated , so that they are already strongly profitable while IBM is still having to build up momentum .
10 say like we 're moving some equipment from one place to another
11 You could also erm , start to recognize the benefit of the rural sector , and one reason why they were discriminating , L D Cs tended to want to ignore that and sort of shun it , because it 's not sort of a glamorous image they were trying to hope for in the urban sector , and , so , if they did help them , say give them units , like the repair men , units to work in , and they put them in really totally crappy accommodation , and up not where you need it , and not where people pass by with their motors and things , they , they 'd put them somewhere up on a hill , overlooking a city , so erm , to encourage the informal sector by erm , sort of on a par with the formal sector because erm , their inter- reacting , inter-relating now , like they 're providing cheap inputs for the formal industries and , and the formal industries are pro providing clientele all for the informal sector , and so it 's all inter-linked and , and it 's there now .
12 Yeah well presumably we 're reversing this position .
13 So that you 'd get move those round a bit so that you 'd get Say that pizza came in like that and your mum sat down there said , Right we 're having some pizza we 're going to share this out between the three of us so we all get the same sized piece .
14 Now you 're getting regular money from this West End show , it 'd be a good opportunity to put a little aside each week — it need n't be much , but you 'd be amazed how it accumulates . ’
15 yeah because ten to fifteen years earlier there was n't this amount of class consciousness and now you 're saying that bond 's completely broken down which I may agree with you on but , but they 're now organizing themselves purely on this hey we 're all friends now or s and we 've got ta gang together all seventy percent of us against the landlords which was n't
16 And we got to there from starting off with fifty pounds between a hundred and fifty of them which was quite hard to handle but by making it smaller this is called cancelling fraction when you take really we 're dividing this side we say , well we 've got ten on the top and ten on , ten times five on the top ten times fifteen on the bottom .
17 Now we 're considering useful ways of spending this year 's money ’ .
18 But really I do n't think so , although I did speak to the Reading manager Ian Porterfield a few minutes ago and he does seem relaxed and so do his players , so you know I am a little worried now , now we 're getting nearer kick-off I 'm beginning to get a little more worried .
19 And now they 're considering legal action .
20 Now they 're using poisoned food , ’ said Grimma .
21 Now they 're treasured local beauty spots .
22 And now they 're entering five teams .
23 The Alliss ' have never accepted that outcome , and now they 're taking civil action to claim damages against the Maules .
24 The Alliss ' have never accepted that outcome , and now they 're taking civil action to claim damages against the Maules .
25 In my department just now they 're working seven days a week ,
26 Well perhaps because they were more idealist and that now they 're becoming more realist but they 're still erm I mean they 're learning from their past mistakes and they 've seen that right so we have to have a moderate policy which is gon na take us a little bit further towards socialism .
27 Well you 're having double garages included .
28 When one calculates , for example , the beginning of the universe , using the methods you described , surely you 're making great assumptions about the laws of physics not having changed ?
29 So let's say now , when we put that one on as well we 're getting eleven amps through .
30 ‘ Well Lynne , today we 're giving equal time to the ladies and throwing the spotlight on one of America 's Most Wanted Femme Criminals , Ms Jessamyn Amanda Bonney , sometimes known under the aliases of Jazzbeaux or Minnie Molotov .
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