Example sentences of "be [adv] [adv] [pron] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 you 're not like it then ?
2 We 're always out they always tend
3 Such people are also not themselves so keen or able to bring on the bright youngsters .
4 Erm wh what I would suggest is the three that are on the group and if John 's going to be off maybe somebody else from NALGO would , would er step in to the group , get together over the next two weeks or so and er try to jointly produce a Northumberland newsletter ?
5 Because they 've always let's be fair they 've always been around so somebody else has been doing them .
6 he never made any thing else in his image , but he made you to be created in his image and with that there 's that status , were not just a more intelligent animal , were not just something else that God made even , but were that , that peak of his creative genius , the peak of it , the very pinnacle of it , not because of what we are , but because of the image , the pattern that he was using , his own self , created us in his image , so that gave us status but it gives us responsibility .
7 Well it were just like I like I the unions were n't as , as er financially well off as they were er at the present day .
8 They never dreamt that it could happen cos she was n't in the risk age group or anything , it just never crossed their minds that it might happen and they were totally well they just did n't know what to think .
9 However , these emotions and practicalities are no longer what really prevents the party from coming unstuck .
10 Intention movements are activities that tend to precede some other activity , which is presumably why they often evolve into signals .
11 I think it 's also worth just bearing in mind that we 're talking about only one percent of the erm of the farmed land i in this county , we 're not talking about banning hunting in in er in Leicestershire , we 're talking about what we 're saying on one percent there are tens of thousand of fields in in this county nothing can change overnight , even if this er motion goes through because the tenants will still have the rights to decide , it 's only when you actually start getting to new tenancy agreements that you will be in a position if you wish , to start to change things and therefore I suppose at the end of erm , at the end of five years you might have a hundred or two hundred fields on which this ban will apply but you will still have tens of thousand of fields on which the , the hunt will still be , the hunts in this county will still be free to , erm , to operate .
12 Yeah well Mr Chairman I would formally like to motions my when the study one and the problems of this having to despite that the District Council have six and it 's much further I again I think specification of erm what we do need despite what we should not need this time , this time later .
13 There 's all not somebody else .
14 See money 's all right they probably love the money you can bring in but if they do n't see you to spend it or to share it .
15 It is only when everything else has genuinely been tried that divorce can ever be contemplated .
16 If the movement is only downwards it usually means disgrace or tiredness .
17 It 's exactly how I always imagined Italy would be . ’
18 ‘ But he is not just anyone else , is he ?
19 The problem is just how you actually erm go about solving it .
20 Well I 'm not sure I mean it 's interest I mean the the Council erm with another the Council looked upon attendances of the things Council do and many people who use the facilities in Harlow will argue we do n't get anything like this where we live and we always find it like that you know it 's that sort of mentality where people in Harlow may or may not say well course you get it in Harlow we expect it it 's just there it just saves we know it 's getting them people to use it but I talk to people I 'm sure people who live in Harlow or the Council to people and Harlow people tend to think well yes yes it 's all with always it 's always there .
21 Oh so it 's not just you then ?
22 ‘ It 's not really anything very important , Michael , it 's rather a small thing we 're asking of you .
23 It 's once again my very pleasant task to welcome you to this , which is the thirty eighth in the series of great centenary lectures , that were inaugurated in this hall in nineteen seventy on a very noteworthy and somewhat stormy occasion .
24 Fridays and Saturdays there 's always always one there every week .
25 If it 's off then I just walk off stage and go ‘ Eeyaahh ! ’ and that 's it .
26 that 's still not it as much as er Robert Maxwell lost and seem , ca , see the Labour party nailing him for that , no you do n't because he was a head of a Labour party paper
27 There 's hardly ever anyone else staying at weekends . ’
28 There 's nearly always something else you could do , rather than study .
29 ‘ Of course , it 's probably not him anyway , ’ she added .
30 ‘ That 's probably why they always look stupid , ’ said Sam .
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