Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [adv] [no cls] " in BNC.

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1 So , it 's all up to the solicitors really er their solicitors and and Stuart 's solicitors they will get everything s sorted out .
2 Right well let's find one or two of these schemes that appear to have lapsed , send some letters to the names in the file , if we do n't get any positive response within a couple of months , let's go and take the signs down er and then wait for the squeals
3 Vince has has raised a point about er erm , informing er and consulting local people and to let local people know erm when the meetings are then local ca n't go , I 'm sure that if they really wanted people to come they 'd make it much more er , in erm with the advertising so clear that er people would be able to and also if they had it at the times when a their meeting at the times when it was mostly convenient to er , the general public .
4 One of the reasons why er Kenneth has a respectable crippling this country , is because there is more flexibility over there to this country .
5 Er and so the therefore you see , these are some of the reasons why w we were unable to get close to the er er er younger members , who were or or or the younger people who were employed in the coal industry .
6 I think it should be remembered that that public support actually was against a requirement of one thousand nine hundred dwellings , which is not quite the proposal being put forward by the County at the moment , but it is clear that there seems to me n not to be any public or great strength of public objection to the sort of proposals that are now before you in this enquiry , and it also seems to me that the reasons behind erm that that public support are essentially because it meets the first requirement of paragraph P P G thirty three , that the alternative expansion of existing towns or villages will represent a less satisfactory method of providing land for new housing that is needed , I think that is the essence of the public support , and so first of I think you can say that that 's that means that first criteria , and certainly it seems to meet the second automatically because it an expression of public preference .
7 We 've got , we 've got ta pay , we 've got ta pay to draw the , the , the lists off ini initially
8 And I 'm sure you need no reminding that during the past ten years , a new order has emerged and is emerging , which is changing the roles traditionally per performed by the three sectors .
9 That is admitted it , the defendants also erm that Mr had told them that he , the bank had approved the loan facilities an and that he wanted to move quickly to er exchange of contracts .
10 He had to go you see , but I mean er later in my lifetime when we lived in the in the village at I can remember very very well the the er the miners there er going to work and then coming home again , going to work and coming home again , nothing for them to do .
11 I think there 've been one or two not er brush ups you know in the pubs once er or twice , they er they wo n't drink with them and that and er some of the lads some of the lads that have gone back have really realized the situation they 've put themselves in you know , and they sorry and now they 're on they do n't know which way to turn .
12 Yes I think there 's some , yeah yeah I , I think there 's , that 's one of the , the areas where er as it were attitudes are most small C conservative , that er sort of liberal heterosexuals whom I know er you know are often quite suspicious of that .
13 Personally I can almost almost remember the days when erm Ulysses was a bound book only to be read in plain cover after having been smuggled through the customs at Folkestone , Dover or Newhaven .
14 Most spreadsheets were designed back in the days when 640KBytes was the maximum amount of memory that was available .
15 But er eventually I found out that er , er , I ca n't er work peacefully here , because if I stopped for er , fighting for the benefit of the workers then er they will think that er I have been bribed or something like this and if I keep fighting for them then there 's no peace of mind , there 's always struggle , so I thought I 'll leave , and the second was , that I wanted to bring my family into this country and I was n't saving anything while leaving them because that 's a bit expensive area and er , the person who got the job for me he said let's migrate to Yorkshire .
16 Let's go back to the terrorists just er just just briefly , Clare whatever you say , that 's a p potent picture and it was a deliberate photo opportunity .
17 Well they 're giving you all the alternatives so a
18 Erm er and erm two of the main er things , I mean , there 's , there 's ob , obviously erm the things like er they definitely .
19 Because they er well the flats just i were n't good enough to be erm you know , structurally , structurally erm renovated or whatever .
20 And so e with that the the decline of the flats really erm seemed to go that way .
21 D do you think your , your amenity-wise er the flats like they they 've got the housing , and the clubs and the playgroup and stuff like that , do you think you 're very badly off for that or ?
22 No , I drafted the questions so erm well I 'm not saying there 's nothing on behaviourism in the paper , I 'm not saying there is .
23 Again taking you back to when you were a steward , erm what do you recall your relations personally and the relations generally er between the stewards and the full timers , the officials of the union ?
24 Using this concept , Rouse considered a molecule in dilute solution under sinusoidal shear and derived the relations where η and η s are the viscosities of the solution and the solvent respectively , n is the number of molecules per unit volume , k is the Boltzmann constant , and ο is the angular frequency of the applied stress which is zero for steady flow .
25 Erm right there 's one of the partners there er he 's a bit er I do n't know what he 's doing he 's doing somersaults I think backwards to help the situation but it does n't .
26 was er hit the landlords economically erm and this is , this is quite interesting sort of prohibition erm sort of stopping the grain exports from a particular area to er bring down grain prices and er secure grain for the peasants themselves .
27 But I mean i i certainly if you go through the , the early bits erm I mean i i i if you take well okay the , the organization bit to begin with , but then hitting the landlords politically er you know y you 're , you 're checking their accounts , you 're imposing their fines when they 've been a bit naughty , you 're letting contributions erm you 're crowning them and going through the streets , you 're locking them up , you 're banishing some of them , you might be executing some of them but i it 's , it 's only specifically where they 've offended against your , your view of the moral economy , where they , where they 've sort of been naughty in terms of
28 Right okay what he is saying is erm that first of all the peasants hit the landlords politically erm and the first thing they wanted to do was smash the political prestige and power of the landlord class erm without victory in this struggle no victory is possible in the economic struggle to reduce rent and interest er to secure land and other factors of production .
29 Well I think I 'll go round actually cos they 're queuing up , we want to go to the grocers so er if we go up The Avenue we shall just come past the front of it .
30 er perhaps if they took that off and subsidised the buses then er it would be a little happier for people travelling to Bicester .
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