Example sentences of "[pron] do [pers pn] [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 He said cos I used to keep the house tidy he said I 've been the in the army June an he said I can I can run a household he said but we and then working the shifts I do he said and go up the horses and that he said I just do n't get time to do it !
2 I said I did I said and I had an awful job to get it out again .
3 Then I had no excuse not to audition for plays , and when I did I found that I enjoyed it .
4 If he was claiming a grant in yours , I did I claimed when I went back to college , my twenties I actually claimed a grant but my father claimed income tax relief claimed under him .
5 The last one we had we had a budget of ten thousand pounds the company which did it said that it would normally not take on a project of that sort of cost but they found a junior member of staff to take it on and the end product I mean that 's going back nearly five years now , was quite er acceptable and welcome but now it it looks very much out , the force has been reorganised , we need to give it a new look .
6 Who do I mean when I talk about ‘ the homeless ’ ?
7 Who do you approach and how do you approach them ?
8 cos he did n't know but you did he said and you have to ge , when yo can you come round is tha
9 Anyway you look like him , yeah you do I thought and I told Sasha right , he looked like Carlton and Sasha and he
10 if you it depends on what you do I mean if you 're generating quantitative material , you know , if you get some sort of scale ratings of things like sort of estimates of how , how frequently they dream
11 Do you do you think that women actually mind whether chaps are bald or not ?
12 Erm do you have cases where the where the girls or same faces keep popping up or do you do you feel that once they 've been pulled in they it puts them off ?
13 One of the things you , you 've got to do is get used to actually talking standing up and the first thing you do you find when you s talk standing up is you discover that you 've got hands .
14 You do you work that I 'll tell you what you work that I 'll work my own out .
15 Who does it affect and how does it affect them ?
16 Who does it hurt but me ? ’
17 Er I think she does a bit of part time I 'm not really sure what she does she comes and goes , she probably works in an old folks ' home or something , she has a uniform .
18 Only when she was halfway there did she remember that this , after all , was n't Chipchester , where she had spent the last six months at college — nor even Athens , where at least the drivers and pedestrians expected to engage in constant warfare — and that perhaps she should have checked the traffic before crossing …
19 They did it free because they thought the information and arguments within the 32 pages were worth spreading .
20 Well in the last 2 days Firmin and Antonio have been getting more and more hostile ( which is n't hard to do given how Charlie and Matt are currently feeling about one another ) and you could really sense the Indians getting involved , following it all from their part of the raft as if their lives depended on it — which in a way they did I suppose because we were arguing about whether they had the right to be baptised and have their souls saved or not .
21 The adventurers have to head for the hill , but as they do it appears that the grey trees begin to grow and spread up the hillside .
22 Whom did they annoy and to whom was their possible presence a political danger ?
23 And to whom did he swear that they should not enter his rest ?
24 ( For example , if a comparison of a new intervention is made with current practice , minimum practice , or doing nothing do I agree that in my setting the same comparison programme would apply ? )
25 He did he said while I were there .
26 It took Martin a long time to get to sleep and even when he did he turned and twisted in feverish attempts to escape the nightmarish pursuit of red , glaring eyes and enormous yellow teeth .
27 And only when he got it did he accept that his day had arrived .
28 However , utterances of ( 38 ) -(40) and the like can in fact convey a great deal : ( 38 ) War is war ( 39 ) Either John will come or he wo n't ( 40 ) If he does it , he does it Note that these , by virtue of their logical forms ( respectively : x ( W(x) — W(x) ) ; p V p ; p — p ) are necessarily true ; ergo they share the same truth conditions , and the differences we feel to lie between them , as well as their communicative import , must be almost entirely due to their pragmatic implications .
29 yeah , I think what it does I mean because I had the change to alter the situation
30 What d' ya do if they get
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