Example sentences of "and we [be] talking " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But the use of range cattle , though the yield is lower and we are talking now about extensification , is sustainable , largely because it can be sustained with minimal input from fossil fuel .
2 ‘ But honestly , when you 're acting you 're acting and you do n't even think about it — and we are talking about a Carry On film after all , so the passion rating is pretty tame .
3 When we are talking about the end of privilege and we are talking about the future and training , we must remember that over half the population are hard done by .
4 And we are talking about this environment , and the contribution it makes to the city of York .
5 Er and we are talking about open countryside outside erm rural settlements and if you look at the wider countryside and that includes in my judgement er the pattern of settlement which is where most people actually do live in in the countryside .
6 And we are talking about a huge skill base within Scotland , a major training resource which is vitally important to Scotland and to thousands of Scottish students in everything from engineering to media graphics .
7 And we 're talking about music ; passionately enough to be waving our arms about ; for our voices to crack in both joy and despair ; for a stranger to be bemused .
8 And we 're talking business in Japan .
9 So when we 're talking about defensive driving and we 're talking about safety , which is the main object of all this , to keep yourself safe one of the most important things is the attitude of the individual , would you not agree ?
10 So they traded them just as we traded with the wool and we 're talking twelfth century thirteenth century , fourteenth century .
11 Erm and we 're talking about half a thousandth of an inch , and for that you know , the man , but when I investigated the case , the man had been working on these things for about three or four weeks .
12 what 's interesting is that those rivalries are not focused as strongly as they used around the very big clubs , and we 're talking less here about what 's gon na happen at Manchester United and Chelsea and perhaps more about the difficulties of Wolves and and Stoke .
13 and we 're talking about two hundred and fifty pound towards that .
14 I have to say there was one piece information I picked up yesterday asking and we 're talking about the rural areas I think in this discussion , the rural viability , rather then er urban .
15 And we 're talking about allocation to units .
16 … ’ bit once the sun and beer has gone to the head and we 're talking as we are after this weekend severe overcooking .
17 Well it 's either that or start from scratch , and we 're talking fifteen thousand pounds
18 Now what I 'm saying to you is that there 's a big question mark as far as Goodey er report is concerned and they can talk about er the surpluses , they can talk about the trustees , but there 's no majority as far as the employees are concerned and this was the question mark that we we were saying that one of the reasons why they were saying you know that the employee should be in the minority because in the end paragraph of the summing up of the Goodey report that states quite clearly that all the responsibility and all the but the employer , now you yourself has said that er as far as the schemes and we 're talking of something in the region of a hundred and twenty eight thousand .
19 And we 're talking at the same time as well ?
20 well that 's quite understandable and we 're talking here about four thousand pounds , it 's a lot of money to anybody is n't it ?
21 And we 're talking about children .
22 Oh , we 're talking about sixth forms , Bill , and we 're talking about all schools which have sixth forms and you 're conscious that there are rather a lot of schools with sixth forms in the county and who will feel that it is a significant change .
23 I have schoolteacher friends , and we were talking about the impact of all this on our children ; that they are becoming even more radical than we were and unavoidably so .
24 and we were talking mainly , an elderly , a female elderly client group , let's be honest you know , in terms of blind you know , and just wait till you see it , it 's lovely
25 And there 's , er , I mean it was showing somebody round the other day and we were talking about it and , and erm they 're saying , yeah I mean , you 've got seven urinals there , so let's say you have a busy night , you 're full , I mean that 's when damage gets done when people
26 and the other chap that brought it round was very nice and we were talking and she said we worked at Panasonic and I said to him said yes , and I , I said oh I know somebody who works for Panasonic , and she said oh they probably know each other and she told me .
27 And we were talking about M E , and how
28 And we were talking about
29 we were only thinking about it this morning and I says I would n't mind a break , you know , like , cos , I mean aunty Mary 's always inviting us , and , and we were talking about the cat
30 Okay we started off and we was talking about the fact that when we perceive things they start off in origin as energy signals in the environment and we detect those changes in the energy and somewhere in the process they get converted into our experiences of perception .
  Next page