Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] [pers pn] would [adv] [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 painting the kitchen once and I got into so much trouble it took him so long to rub it all off and start again , he made me promise I 'd never touch a paint brush again but he I mean , he would definitely be able to tell you what paint he used and
2 I mean they ai n't sort of I mean what they could force you to do if they really , I mean they would never do that but what they could force you to do or Les to do would be to check with all those people who I 've actually sort of made payments to , to make sure that I have .
3 Now things like erm , well one of my old favourites Arran Pilot i if you dig it out when it 's young , then of course it stays as it should , cos it 's a very very waxy potato but , but I can remember growing varieties like Majestic and things like that and I mean they would never fall , they would never fall in the water but they make good chips er of the modern varieties I think I 'd go for er Kondor with a K er which is a very very good potato and does stay as it is i in the ground but one other thing I think also comes into it .
4 It was rough but you know it , it w it was petty things that we was in trouble for , not , nothing sin I mean we would never think of mugging anybody or vandalizing things for the sake of vandalizing .
5 I mean we 'd never have been able to afford all this .
6 You said it was completely confidential but I mean I would just say well it 's , it 's between Friends Provident and yourself end of story .
7 I mean I would never buy it , but I would try not to buy anything .
8 I 've , I 'd got a few stares from some of the women there , I mean , there are some women there that are huge , and maybe they looked at me and thought oh I hope I can wear leggings like that one day , I mean I do n't think I look too bad in the leggings , I mean I would never have done it when I used to go to Weightwatchers when I was thirteen and a half stone , I would never of gone in leggings , no way , but it does n't
9 Erm that 's I mean I would really recommend that you make the time .
10 Well I think that 's quite I mean I 'd probably knock him down to a hundred anyway .
11 I mean I 'd rather leave it if I can until it does
12 I know they all have but I mean I 'd rather have the ordinary names and then
13 Well no I 'm not actually back to the centimetre cost I do n't agree with the centimetre argument er the centimetre argument I mean I 'd rather have one good solid paragraph which
14 I mean I 'd rather have tea , sorry , yeah .
15 but I mean I 'd rather have a Calibre than that definitely
16 And I think in the past there there actually been music in in foyer bar erm yeah I mean I 'd certainly look at that I mean .
17 Well I mean I 'd certainly use it .
18 I mean I 'd really like to , but I 've already been shouldered out of the Nativity play .
19 Bu I mean I 'd only advise those if you have like er you know , children with grubby hands and
20 so I mean you would still 've got your golf thing out
21 Right so the functional form test , if we look at the kie squared version , right , again we 've got a very small er test statistic implying there 's no breach of functional form right , the , the log er specification , right , seems to be working okay , there 's no problems with it erm if we now look at normality we 've got a bit of a problem with normality , right in that our test statistic is now four point nine , if we look at the critical value at the five percent level of kie when kie squared two , ah it 's not too bad , our five percent critical value of the kie squared two is five point nine nine , so although that test statistic is reasonably high , I mean you 'd probably reject , oh yes , we can reject the null at ten percent of normally distributed errors we would n't reject the null at five percent erm let's just have a look at in actual fact at those errors to see what the problem is .
22 Yeah cos I mean you 'd probably run her back , rather than her biking .
23 Yeah cos if it was as bad as he said it was , I mean he would only stand up for one or two hours at a time , whereas he 'd been up since nine , he was still sitting up at one o'clock when I arrived there
24 I mean he 'd perhaps get erm you know er let's say four hundred pounds a year on his building society , so he 'd have some extra income , er four five , just over five thousand pounds a year , that 's .
25 You see a working , well of course they do get them up nowadays , but in th you were supposed t to stay in bed for at least a fortnight after the mother was born but you a lot of these mothers used to hop out of bed when the midwife had gone , and , and I mean if they 'd got two or three children and a husband coming in and they had n't got a mother or a neighbour or somebody to come in and do the cooking , i I mean she 'd just get up and get on with it herself .
26 And she 'll , she 's one-off so I mean she 'd never go to p
27 And look I mean she 'd never spend
28 Probably too weak ; and , even if she was n't , I expected she would just let me crack my skull on the pavement because women like to see men helpless .
29 ‘ Oh , I expect you 'd both like some coffee too . ’
30 and I I found I 'd just put a hundred there instead and that 's why I put two hundred
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