Example sentences of "in those [noun pl] they " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 So if the law was clear that in those circumstances they should have been on notice and should have therefore watched where the money was going , there would n't have been a problem and are we not saying that legitimate stock lending which I think is what is about is suggesting , if carried on properly on the market , would be all right , but if it immediately goes off market into the back doors and back rooms and people ca n't see what 's going on and the Financial Institutions take part in that , then they are doing something that un undoubtedly is probably going to cause loss to pension funds and should n't there be a clear law which makes them liable in those circumstances .
2 So if the law was clear that in those circumstances they should have been on notice and should have therefore watched where the money was going , there would n't have been a problem and are we not saying that legitimate stock lending , which I think is what Good is abou is suggesting , if carried on properly on market , would be all right , but if it immediately goes off market into the back doors and back rooms and people ca n't see what 's going on and the financial institutions take part in that , then they are doing something that un undoubtedly is probably going to cause loss to pension funds and should n't there be a clear law which makes them liable in those circumstances .
3 Maybe in those galleries they do , I just do n't , do n't really know .
4 In those proceedings they succeeded : Reg. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners , Ex parte Woolwich Equitable Building Society [ 1987 ] S.T.C. 654 ; [ 1990 ] 1 W.L.R. 1400 .
5 They may , let me just explain the track then , in those situations they may well be investing in the depots , maintenance and so on , but let me just
6 So , in their capacity as workers in those factories they were not Co-operators at all , though they may very well have been members of consumers , co-operative societies owning an interest in those factories .
7 In those days they were basically a mime company , though their grotesque appearance , and their ability to wring wild laughter from the depiction of desperate , squalid lives , marked them out as something special .
8 In those days they were automatically exempt until the first round proper .
9 In those days they had very few clothes .
10 Before the war at a luncheon party like this people would have said precisely the same things but they would have sounded different , because in those days they were accompanied by a sort of humming noise , not articulate , but musical , exciting , which changed the value of the words themselves …
11 Yes the er the doctors were very very keen in those days they 'd repo , I remember Doctor telling me about a case on .
12 That 's another thing they used to do in those days they never do now , a lot of men when they bought a pair of boots , they had them what they called plumped .
13 Nowadays the rich snort coke ; in those days they got drunk and had orgies . ’
14 Maybe if chlorophyll tablets bad been available in those days they might have helped but as it was I had tried everything .
15 And , and whenever they knew you 've come would you , would you walk through and , and they used to for us every time an tha and that in those days they 'd give you a couple of bob which is , it was a fortune to me at that age .
16 Boys in those days they were always given the best education .
17 Cos in those days they did n't .
18 Er nowadays so many things are just accepted that in those days they would n't be .
19 I do n't sort of , I mean in those days they had wh apprenticeships and , and that sort of thing .
20 Now I think they have sep little tables now but in those days they were long , just long trestle tables .
21 But in those days they were called temples , and gods lived in them .
22 In those days they did n't use mileometers , what they did was they took any particular route number and the number of journeys they did , because in those days a bus kept on a route which applied , say between Witton and Rushmere Heath all day , did n't run around like they do nowadays and erm when the schedules were prepared , each bus had got a route number or was placed on a route number , say one Witton , two Witton , three Witton and a copy of its schedule was recorded on another sheet and the mileage , having known what the mileage was and we 'd used to obtain that from the Borough Surveyor 's Department , er I think it was about nine point one four miles a return trip Witton and Rushmere Heath , er you 'd work out how many journeys they did there and say well that bus was due to run a hundred and twenty six miles during the day .
23 the thing and in those days they used to have the punched cards , you know , erm they still have this
24 Reference is often made to Britain 's honourable and proud tradition of welcoming refugees , but in those days they consisted mainly of persecuted individuals .
25 In those days they lived next door but now they 've only got their offices there .
26 Well , you were talking flying the horses around putting them in horses boxes well in those days they did n't have many vehicles did they ?
27 In those days they were very good at Leeds , I got a nice letter back and was also sent some programmes and stuff .
28 I saw that the wing commander engineering , who also was a pilot ( but in those days they did an engineering course as we had no Engineering Officers , at least I do not remember any ) opened his window in the office and climbed out .
29 In those days they were small holdings .
30 I do n't think in those days they wanted women with minds of their own , did they ?
  Next page