Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [verb] to [adv] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ After all , to do the job properly I need to thoroughly understand what 's involved . ’
2 Well I w w yes I mean obviously I need to so erm just to get it
3 So I got to even up the score and have a wonderful , if demanding , week of fun acting .
4 Where possible , you should choose a period that is in line with how long you want to deep the car , so that when the time comes to replace it you can start again from scratch .
5 of course he got all upset so she had to then mess about and try and get him to sleep , which apparently she did
6 So you tend to gradually come round to the view that unless it 's causing very bad visual pollution , or you 've had a run of complaints about it , then you tend not to take a stat . ’
7 so you have to actually figure a new one out before we can
8 We have heard quite a lot , colleagues , about pensions and pension schemes over the last eighteen months perhaps we have to actually thank Mr Maxwell for raising the issue , even if those pensioners he cheated wo n't thank him .
9 So we had to as soon as they come we had to open a trench and heel them in do you see .
10 So we had to as far as all the schools and colleges were concerned erm there was a previous Council agreement that erm increments , that is the progression of Council employees through their salary scales , that had to be funded from what we call base budgets this year , so the budgets of the the delegated budgets of schools had to erm bear that cost along with everybody else .
11 So we have to somehow resolve that and to address the issue somehow — and we intend to .
12 Anyway I got to virtually the lat rung and of course I was smack up against the wall .
13 Usually we have to back off and tone down , because although the public have an insatiable appetite for gore , the camera crews get a bit queasy . ’
14 Right , well following that then , is it agreed that also we write to both the Secretary of State and our local M Ps ,
15 Now I listen to there , I do n't listen as often now unless there 's something big on , and you hear them , you know , check on , whatever it is , your vehicle check and I have seen them as little as five seconds coming back and saying who owns that car
16 So Margot got off the bus and the policeman says , now you have to really vigilant today Margot there 's a lot of bombs in Lisburn Right !
17 Not before you get to there !
18 Now we come to probably the last of the Bishops to use Halling Palace .
19 Oh , now we have to really look .
20 These groups operate sometimes in concert and at other times in opposition , but almost inevitably they seem to further their own interests at the expense of the rural working class .
21 Well you have to sometimes .
22 So Mike must , said to him well , the thing is well we wanted to really get in before Easter
23 Here we come to more difficult ground .
24 And if the Newquay lot turn up round here we have to really run 'em down . ’
25 But basically , the man that , you know , my father said to me well he said to where 's the horses ?
26 She did not reply at once , taking her time to empty the water from the snowdrop jar , then she glanced to where Doreen already occupied the front seat of the minibus .
27 Victor and George ended up riding a spare horse — I do n't know where it came from — and then we went to where they 'd come from .
28 Then we had to then fiddle about and get the chain up with a big pole and heave that up and we always knew that if a dumb hopper come back and they 'd what we used to call they 'd lost a door , one of the doors used to break , used to be about I would say erm eight doors in the hold , separate doors and if one of them broke they 'd fiddle about with a big , what we would call a pole with a hook on trying to get hold of the chain and we 'd see that there pole sticking up out of the hold , we knew they lost a door so what they used to do they used to leave with the dredger and we 'd finish that off before we load it , had to .
29 Well all we had was Broadfield School and that 's where my boys had to go to Broadfield , they went into Broadfield School and erm , they all got on alright you know , they got on well there and then from there they went to when the new school was built they went to Netteswell school you see , but two of my sons are electricians and unfortunately the eldest one , one of the electricians I could n't put him to apprentice because I could n't afford it cos I had a hard to struggle to bring them up you know in those days , we did n't get erm any family allowance or anything those days , and erm , so therefore he could n't go , but he sort of got on and got his own factory , but my other son who 's an electrician , one of the twins he 's erm , he 's got his City and Guilds he passed , he went , he was able to go to the school when the new schools were built you see , when Netteswell school was built he was able to go to night school and er learn all you see , then there was the one at Burnt Mill was n't there , down the bottom ?
30 Then it dropped to roughly 2 per cent .
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