Example sentences of "when [pron] [verb] all " in BNC.

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1 And when I saw all of them after such a long time I did n't like to go back again , really I did n't want to at all .
2 When I saw all my people at the station , I felt completely overwhelmed .
3 Inside the farmhouse , she showed me some of her furniture and when I saw all the cards around the place and she began to talk about how proud she was about the large number of people who wrote to her , it dawned on me that she must be a bit of a celebrity .
4 When I saw all th'trouble you caused ol' Nate here , I decided y'were n't gon na come out t'start on my patch when y'recovered .
5 It makes my heart sick when I remember all the good words and all the broken promises …
6 She does n't complain when I scrap all those carrier bags and buy two soft holdalls .
7 Yet I felt at last I had straightened out the time that had buckled when I lost all my writing .
8 I wished I 'd of done when I lost all my weight
9 cos when I ironed all my clothes and they were mach squashed , and like all his clothes there 's a wardrobe in the wall and a double one a and the three of us can hang clothes in there .
10 I was a trifle nervous when I remembered all the films I 'd seen about weddings .
11 I says what curling tongs , says you left curling tongs on , I 'd actually burnt my finger I must 've sleepwalked and I , I felt the bed when I remembered all this and it was dry so I must have sleepwalked it all and went to the toilet and done my hair cos there was a big burn all down my finger .
12 When I caught all the balls it made the game a lot more fun for both of us .
13 The thing that upsets me when I see all these pregnant people walking around is that I did n't do it .
14 ‘ When Leila told me about you , when I read all that shit you left her , I pitied you , ’ she said bitterly .
15 When you get all three together it 's probably wiser to get out , if only to preserve one 's sanity . ’
16 It just shows , I think , how vigilant Councillors need to be when you get all these documents , and you do get many of them if you 're a District County Councillor , and how necessary it is for you to read them and study them and to remember because these things are very very important when they 're put in when it goes to higher authority at that time .
17 Because I think you find that when you go all time , when you come to go into a salon I think you find you 're slower , do you know what I mean , because you 're not used
18 Erm I would have thought this was welcome news in the modern world actually when you know all these people in the Middle East have got to live together .
19 How long ago was that then , how old would I of been then , when you had all these alterations done ?
20 Erm the Aldershot method works or appears to work very well with structured thoughts the two merge together very well and erm again that 's the putting down on paper I did n't believe that had actually talk at all and yet it works and as you read it things come into the brain and when you combined all that with the coaching and you can see what you 're doing wrong the rest of it .
21 You know what to do , when you shoot all them aircraft down ?
22 When you put all these factors together it concerns me that nobody has been advancing the case that as with other districts , some other districts in York , it would be appropriate , even more appropriate in my view , that the migration assumption should be discounted , there are in my view special reasons why this should be the case , special reasons over and above tho those that have been applied , to the other districts , this in my view would be that the Greater York housing provision for all those reasons I 've just highlighted , should be reduced , should be reduced to the seventy five percent level , in other words that would be reducing it by between a thousand and twelve hundred and fifty houses , now I wo n't get on to the reason that the fact that that 's one reason why there 's no need for a new settlement , erm but it is a reason in its own right just to protect the character and the capacity requirements and the environmental sensitivities of the Greater York area .
23 And when you put all that together I think we would recognise that there is no single of learning that suits every congregation because congregations differ , one from the other .
24 Well how can you go on a diet when you buying all this chocolate ?
25 Oh yeah and of course you 've got to be a bit careful as well when you hear all these things on the motorway
26 Annoying when your not pleased with when you spent all your time doing it and then your not pleased with it .
27 Harvey Darton 's definition of the nature of King Solomon 's Mines and Treasure Island touches present-day taste very closely , with its prescription of ‘ surprise upon surprise , each one sudden , but each one also natural , capable of rational and brave explanation when you knew all the facts . ’
28 And er it used to be quite event when you saw all the queue and , and er of course with Walsall Wood you 've got the room over the shop where the Guild room was and a rest room I think for the staff .
29 It was most wonderful when you saw all the children bronzed and happy knowing what they went through it was great that they began to trust us .
30 For example on the building that we 're talking about shifting , first of all we 've got to find a site for the thing , then we 've got to get planning permission , then we 've got to get the actual permission of the owner of the land , then we 've got to make sure that erm electricity 's laid on , that there 's water laid on , that there 's some sort of toilet or other facilities and so on , and when you add all that up it 's quite a complicated sort of series of bureaucratic procedures you 've got to go through and it 's not a question of , you know , of people saying to us as Councillors well , you know , do this for us and we can magic it out in six months out of thin air _ there 's an awful lot of paperwork that 's got to be gone through and an awful lot of people to see and an awful lot of red tape , really , to get through first — I mean just to make sure that the thing 's safe and complies with health and safety standards — and that 's something which you have to get across to young people and if they 're involved in the actual discussions on this and involved in the organisation , they begin to see the complexities and they 're less inclined , I think , to automatically assume that erm people are n't on their side and do n't want to listen .
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