Example sentences of "[adv] we [verb] [adv] [art] " in BNC.

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1 And when when he gets to know us a bit better we got quite a welcome tonight .
2 I do not know if elegans shares the interesting ‘ primitive ’ features of livingstonii — it is certainly quite similar in appearance — but if it does then perhaps we have here a group of fish descended from ancestors which stopped off on the way to the rocks , and which did not need to evolve the specialisations needed in the more-densely populated and competitive atmosphere of the rocky zones .
3 ‘ I 'm thinking , ’ Johnny Dee raised his glass and took thinking sips , ‘ perhaps we acted just a tad rashly . ’
4 Er but she 's a member and we went there for lunch and it was the ideal place , you know , cos there were n't any , many people around and so we had quite a nice lunch and erm whilst we were there we then had a drink in er in the bar and erm her the , the secretary of the club , a lady , came to talk to Barbara and she mentioned that she 'd seen her on Blind Date you see , and so I got to know more by listening to them two speaking er and er that 's where I learnt about er that .
5 So we need both a psychological and a sociological perspective .
6 you put your glasses on to try and see , and you ca n't pluck the eyebrows because the glasses are in the way so we do quite a lot of eyebrow trimming , erm at salon .
7 The sooner we leave here the better ! ’
8 Luckily we have much the same tastes in television .
9 Hence we present here the first rationalization of active-centre disallowed Ramachandran angles that are likely to play a direct role in protein function .
10 Clearly we have here a very powerful tool .
11 Now we 've quite a we , we have first of all , in the light green papers notice of motion from Mr Ainsley of moving a new five .
12 Now we had quite a problem trying to obtain erm a bottle size the two litre size at a reasonable price when we set out on this er thing .
13 Okay so let's see , okay things that I bought , right how much and now we need quite a bit sort of across there if we can , if we can get it .
14 Here we give only the first part of Ohmann 's illustration : [ 8 ] the desk and the shelf above it on which rested the ledgers in which McCaslin recorded the slow outward trickle of food and supplies and equipment which returned each fall as cotton made and ginned and sold …
15 Well that , that 's what I 'm saying is that , I think what we have to start doing and I 'm not suggesting you 're not doing , but I just want to talk about this in , before we practically kick off on the course proper , I think what , I mean that comes off , and then the oil starts dripping out of it , and the minute the oil starts dripping out , then we become quite a good artist are n't we ?
16 But if that is our conclusion , then we miss perhaps the most profound contribution this story has to make to theology and to faith .
17 And then we 've basically the only two The only thing I have n't turned is crime .
18 Sitting with Lords Justices Gibson and McCowan , he said : ‘ If he has no intention of disclosing his source , whatever the House of Lords , which is the ultimate court of justice in this country , may say , then we see absolutely no reason why we should assist him . ’
19 Turning now very briefly to the H One D the Greater York issue , clearly the comments I 've made about the calculations for York have a knock on effect for our position on Greater York , the Greater York figures as I understand it from the County Council are based on a one hundred percent migration assumption , if the technical difference between us er we are right then we believe clearly the Greater York figure should be increased by an appropriate amount , and the we 've suggested the increased cut should be seven hundred er relating to the city itself I ca n't calculate with any great accuracy what the figure for the surrounding parts of Greater York might be , but it would be we suspect only another one to two hundred more on top of that , therefore that underst explains the reason why the City Council suggests that the Greater York should be increased to the ten four figure from the nine seven .
20 Then we consider again the equity implications of taxation .
21 I suppose one of the things I use to demonstrate it most clearly is that for many years I s I gave lectures on communications and one of the things I used to say in those lectures was I did not know , and I was stressing that sense what came first if newspapers write stories in a particular way , because that is what the public wanted or do public want a particular type of story and that 's that newspapers round-up and I stopped posing that question when Rupert Murdoch bought the Melbourne Sun because Rupert Murdoch bought the Melbourne Sun and introduced a lot of sex-type stories you know stories about brothels and madames whipping people and goodness knows what else and the sales rocketed and there we had almost a captive example of change in the design of change in the type of stories that were written and people , people were buying it and so you have an issue of you know that your content was actually being by what your readership wanted .
22 As yet we have only a very limited understanding of how we might set about determining ‘ the depth of the pragmatic context which is necessary ’ for interpretation .
23 Again we have here a variable which we can use to regulate individual needs if required , twelve shakes giving a slightly sharper daily rise in potency than eight .
24 Okay we find quite a few clothes bits of leather , shoes , stuff like that , okay .
25 Certainly we see here a very close relationship , of the kind envisaged by Durkheim , between society on the one hand and religion on the other .
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