Example sentences of "went and [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Do you remember the first year when we went and everybody went and put notice in front ?
2 That 's when the sirens went and we had to go to the shelter .
3 We went and we discussed .
4 You know and we went and we booed and er a lot got thrown out , cos he had his mobsters there you know .
5 At twenty five minutes to twelve the bell went and we went to French .
6 Okay we know where it went and we know what it was used for , but er my question to you is , is it a legitimate use of a pension fund to fund a business development scheme which involves early retirement ?
7 But er , we went and we travelled overland , spent
8 so we started to look for something and I wanted a bungalow , I did n't want to house again , just the two bedrooms I thought would be nice , so what we did we found this bu er this bungalow in er out of Crewe in Haslington and er we put up our house for sale , it cost seventeen thousand , five hundred and this bungalow we bought seventeen thousand , six hundred and fifty , so all I had to add was one hundred and sixty pounds , to sell the house , but the house needed change all the windows to put all the windows and the doors because they were all rotting in , you know , because the houses built er before the second world war and er what we did we put up the and in three months ' time , it in three months ' time my house went and we were moved , in September we started to sell , in January we 'd been living in the , in the new bungalow and then about three years later they built a row of bungalows on the other side where there should , should of been , they kept the land , it should of been shops , but then they changed their minds , they did , they did n't build the shops , but they built all these bungalows again on the other side , you 've been to my home , yeah , so the road that , over the road these bungalows were about three years later than ours and they were going down for thirty two thousand pound , and I bought mine for seventeen thousand seven sixty at six fifty , yeah
9 no we went to Aldy and we went and we went
10 that 's where we went and we saw those lads who 'd be about our age , so funny , right one night
11 and it just went and we had to get these guys who , who did the washing machine
12 yeah , well I was there the other day and erm the bell went and nobody sort of moved and I thought I think , I know , you know , so I got up and I washed me cup of tea like , you know , they looked at me as if you know oh there 's a keen , but I mean I do think it 's important to do that , because not only that it 's not fair for the
13 I du n no erm tt I was up er David 's and Eileen 's when it went and their windows rattled .
14 They were never welcome wherever they went and they had grown used to the Moor .
15 Well every , you know erm I can remember the time er when I first went and they used to have silver er plated of course , silver plated water jugs on the counter and silver plated sugar bowls with tongs and loaf sugar for people to use and of course well and when you see the war came along , you see , they were all taken away because , you see , we had troop trains we were up day and night so the troops with tea .
16 you see and I 'm glad I did n't miss it , I 'm glad I went through all what I did and , and this particular raid , you see , the siren went and they said a telegraph office read , you see , an and then I thought I 'll go to the back door and I went to the , well it was actually on the front of the station and I went to the front of the station and there was this plane swooping down like that and of course , you see , the bombs did n't fall down straight like that but they went as the plane went and they knocked down a row of houses at the end of the road .
17 you see and I 'm glad I did n't miss it , I 'm glad I went through all what I did and , and this particular raid , you see , the siren went and they said a telegraph office read , you see , an and then I thought I 'll go to the back door and I went to the , well it was actually on the front of the station and I went to the front of the station and there was this plane swooping down like that and of course , you see , the bombs did n't fall down straight like that but they went as the plane went and they knocked down a row of houses at the end of the road .
18 When er the army was instructed by the president to go to Little Rock and enforce the desegregation of schools , they went and they did it .
19 So she went and they 've made a lovely job of it !
20 I think that 's what Tony 's harking back to , the old style when you went and they were a bit er callous .
21 you know they went and they tried for the erm flying business .
22 Nex anyway it 's quite near Portsmouth and we heard that the first Queen Elizabeth ship , they do n't say it 's the first but they call this one the Q E Two but there was a Q E One , you see at one time and so we took a coach from there to Southampton because we heard that she was in dock there and so we went and there were crowds of people and all in a queue waiting to go in .
23 Nine o'clock came and went and there was no sign of him .
24 and that was the girls grammar school and then there was the City school where your dad went and there was the Lincoln school
25 And er , some of us did go , Maisie went and and I went and there was Joan , .
26 The girls said it was the room with the round window that faced down the town and that Eve could sit at the window and watch everyone and where they went and who they were with .
27 and erm , and so , you know we did n't say anything erm , cos he wanted us to buy , so Michelle and I went and my mother .
28 Sometimes a bale of cloth went and you wondered how it could get past the Dock gate .
29 A lot of them of course went to the quarries , but then they had a little steamer called the Florence Cook and she plied wherever she went and you probably know where she went .
30 . Whe when you went and you did n't have to leave them , you know .
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