Example sentences of "[noun prp] when [pron] [verb] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 No prizes for guessing who Ian Chapman , the publisher sacked by Rupert Murdoch when he took over William Collins , was referring to yesterday when he launched his new company .
2 unlike Kelly and David when they come round , they just walk in , you know
3 I agree with what you 're saying , but we should also look at what we do , for instance David when you go out you virtually never divert your telephone , everytime you go out ten minutes later I get up and go and divert your phone for you , if we get into the habit of diverting our phones then we we would n't have that problem .
4 ‘ I 'll tell that to Fairburn when he gets back . ’
5 and did I tell you I bumped into Jean when I went down
6 ‘ I will speak to City chairman Peter Swales when I get back to Manchester on Thursday . ’
7 Replacing the highly popular Mr Dubcek was no easy task , but on the grounds that Janos Kadar salvaged something in Hungary when he took over after the popular uprising of 1956 , Mr Husak might have achieved something .
8 What will happen to the smiling pose of Miss World when she comes down with a cold ?
9 He might have been listening to Moses when he came down from the mountain .
10 Doddie Weir still has a lot to learn about No 8 play when it comes to back-row moves , witness the occasion against England when he picked up against the wheel and still tried to complete the move .
11 She found herself walking along the road saying ‘ I 'll talk it all over with Alan when I get in — he 'll know what to do ’ , only to remember that it was Alan who was the cause of the heartache .
12 ‘ Is it after you or my father ? ’ he whispered to Tallis when she came back to him .
13 There was never owt to be done with Jake when he took on that wild-eyed look . ’
14 No she 's looked under the M's and the fax but , I 'll have to have a word with Anthony when he comes back and see what the hell he 's playing at .
15 Like lying on one 's back as we did in Spain when we slept out looking up between the fig-branches into the star-corridors , the great seas and oceans of stars .
16 he growls at Reggie when he comes up to say ta ta in the morning , if Reggie puts his arm under him , and looks as if he 's gon na move him off the bed he , he 'll , he 'll growl
17 ‘ Have you heard Daisy Yates is joining you in Cas. when she gets back from holiday this week-end ?
18 Lester Piggott when he won on .
19 There was considerable interest in three limited edition prints by Russell Flint when they came up at Bloomfield auctions .
20 ‘ He can double up with Bertie when he gets back .
21 She was killed by PERSEUS when he held up his shield to her and she gazed at her own reflection .
22 The British Lions were amused to read of the plight of referee Steve McNally when they picked up the local paper in Paihia before the first match of their New Zealand tour .
23 Mum can I give one to Robert when he comes out of school ?
24 Mum can I give one to Robert when he comes out of school ?
25 they live in the , a beautiful house , a little house , old , very old and erm they always said there was a secret passage underneath and my , my uncle er used to er he used , he named , he named some locks , my uncle did a till lock and when I star began to work there er they were called Salmon Baits and er Mr said to me you know he said er it 's your un they used to call him Trot , my uncle , it 's your uncle Trot that named them and I said was it and it was a till lock and they could n't get them right er they were having trouble with these particular till locks , and er my uncle said to Mr when he went around they were having trouble and he said , all these locks all these things are good for a bait for Salmon and then they were called Salmon Bait and they were traded as Salmon Bait so
26 However , the broad principle which informs Benveniste 's category of the personal is most pertinently extrapolated onto a narrative model by Barthes when he points out that traditional critical practice has tended to attribute all apparently subjective ( or personal ) elements to a psychological reality placed outside the language of the text itself : the mind or personality of the author , the narrator or a character in the story .
27 I 'll say a quiet good-bye to your mother and father and perhaps you would explain to Sandra and tell Matthew when you come back . "
28 ‘ We 're getting warmer , sir , ’ said Marshall when they met up .
29 I was just going to our Pam when you come in and of course Joe was saying what 's that like and I never .
30 Oh er aye Jimmy , well , I 'll tell you , I 'll see Dougie when he comes out .
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