Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [pron] could [verb] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 I mean we could go back up and go into Ashpoles and then just go down Park with er black widows and just blow the shit out of everything .
2 I mean we could get about , we got about alright .
3 I mean I could sit down and write a piece of doggerel about what we 're doing now that rhymed and was comic and so on .
4 I mean I could find out more about this Bella . ’
5 Presumably there 's so many songs in your repertoire that you you 've no need really to get a new one er you as artists might want to get a new one but you 've got so many er evergreens I mean you could go on for ever with just the evergreens could n't you ?
6 I mean you could go out , and you could put a little bit of money in the building society , or the bank , or you could have a gamble on the Stock Exchange , but we have two advantages .
7 I mean she could come up to us , but she always seems to be rushing about , here , there and everywhere do n't she ?
8 But I reckoned I could make out Joanna within half a dozen yards .
9 But , given the money , I know we could come up with a British winner . ’
10 I know you could come up with something — your work was always the best , and I 've every faith that you could do a good job . ’
11 I reckon we could get by with 3 centre backs and blood a youngster if injuries occurred .
12 I reckon we could climb up there and have a look around . ’
13 So any of these I reckon you could work out any any acid with any alkali you could work it out .
14 Watching the Trooper disappear up the road , I reckon it could go on trooping for a long time yet at the right price , with very little needing doing .
15 I believe we could build up the parliamentary group to more than 100 members . ’
16 I guess I could sign off . ’
17 six or seven times when I walked down Tesco on a lunch time on my own , they 're always at the end one , so I suppose they could get in and out , but they 're lovely kids some of them
18 Oh well we 're fairly heavily committed at the moment but erm well I suppose we could go up to a budget of about forty pounds a month .
19 I suppose we could get round there inside the walls , ’ said Gurder .
20 I suppose you could go down , ’ he said soothingly .
21 Well I suppose you could go off .
22 Presumably all this applies equally well to , to shops because I suppose you could link up the cash registers to some sort of stock control , so that you could almost keep a running total of what you , you have in stock as you erm punch the appropriate numbers up on the , on the till ?
23 I suppose I could go in for advertising . ’
24 I suppose I could carry on with the cataloguing , ’ she suggested .
25 I suppose I could get around to it myself in time .
26 I feel I could pull off the cruelly applied latex prosthetics and find there one of those untroubled faces from the frontispiece of Country Life or Tatler .
27 It must have taken her an awful lot to write those words , and they were why I felt I could go back and see her now .
28 It was so close that I felt I could reach out and touch her .
29 Maybe I thought we could make up for all those afternoons .
30 I thought we could stay in and … ’
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