Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] [adv] [pron] [verb] the " in BNC.

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1 I mean just you know the the sort of , Well look er you know it does n't mean I wo n't respect you and I do n't love you and all that sort of thing .
2 Oh it was yes , I mean y when you take now erm er a boatman , I mean , and he , he like today well they ring up , I mean today I know the Ipswich Port Authority they lay the phone on the houses and they pay for it for 'em
3 I mean yesterday i cut the lawn .
4 I , I mean obviously I hope the decisions will go my way because Keith has actually argued in the past that we should disregard F E , because he says it 's , it 's impossible to fairly take account of that , and what he means is there 's no F E formulae in Northallerton , so he knows that if F E is excluded Northallerton will be at a major divan
5 I mean basically you say the bloke says we 're going to sit down and make a decision tonight
6 Yes , as you 'll see I mean basically I think the erm the reason is they just need to hang on until the male 's finished , but we 'll
7 I mean suddenly we had the example of a women 's support group from the miner 's strike th that we had the idea you know fr from that erm and Yona really put it in a nutshell when she said I think er er you know behind closed doors the women worrying about what was gon na happen next you know they felt very frustrated and in a way it was a way to channel o our energies away i i i it was seen as that really in the beginning you know as a a sort of a more as a way of getting rid of the well y you know the sort of desperation er the impotence one felt of not being able to do anything in this situation and it 's er and by now of course we 've all become as a group very close er you know we 're we 're more like a big family now really an sort of er a lot of the women have never really sort of regularly been to meetings an th the commitment there is very strong really that we all turn up to our Tuesday meetings sort of .
8 Yeah , I put well I put the name as well
9 When I stand up I see the wooden block full of knives on the work surface , just visible by moonlight next to the gently gleaming stainless steel of the sinks .
10 Of course , she keeps them locked — her precious ‘ confidentiality ’ — but I know where she keeps the spare key . ’
11 I know where he keeps the money . ’
12 I know why he likes the photographing business .
13 And I said , ‘ I know why you picked the name Roger Short , because Shorty Rogers did an album once on a label he was n't supposed to , and changed his name from Shorty Rogers to Roger Short . ’
14 I know now I made the wrong decision , I should have buried it . ’
15 You look forward to your meals very much , and I think you must have a cook with imagination because I know sometimes you have the same thing constantly and you get very bored by it .
16 But erm I remember when we got the original broom that we 've got in the garden now , the golden one
17 Mi you know the really old Russian ones , when they I remember when they shot the rockets up and then the bits of them just get left behind in space .
18 ‘ I had known David for quite a long time ; we come from Cambridge and I knew him vaguely in the early days — I remember when he joined the Floyd in fact — and I 'd seen him socially over the years .
19 ‘ I think I remember where I know the name from .
20 I see the sign saying Welcome to Inverness just as I remember where I left the car and where I left from this morning and just before I turn and stamp to the nearest desk and demand in my highest dudgeon to be taken to Edinburgh on a charted Lear if necessary or limoed immediately to the highest-starred hotel within a reasonable radius for a free overnight dinner , bed and breakfast and unlimited bar tab .
21 Yes , I remember why you left the Met . ’
22 I remember once he called the squad together ‘ for ten minutes ’ just before we were due to go to dinner .
23 He was , and when the youth heard that Herbert Chapman wanted him to play for Huddersfield , ‘ I remember how he dropped the barrow .
24 I remember how he described the messages Mme Guérigny maintained she received from Montaine .
25 As I drift off I have the start of the running-through-the-woods dream again but I get away from it and do n't remember anything else .
26 Now erm I suppose more recently coming up the present , coming away from nineteenth century Vienna into erm I suppose really I suppose the nineteen seventies , nineteen eighties , people became much more interested in the issue of child sex abuse again and this was n't really because of any great developments in clinical psychology or psychiatry .
27 He was many years her senior , as you will be aware — I doubt not you know the rest . ’
28 No oh more sadness there 's one thing that I do n't I searched the whole world for someone like you .
29 I think well I mean the bit of green 's good is n't it ?
30 Er we did we were gon na raise a point on that the clash of the regulatory rules and the producery duty of under trust law , you know and I I think there you know there there was a comment that that I picked up with Professor Gower you know in his report which I think where he said the Government obviously have greater confidence than I in reliance on pristine trust law in relation to modern commercial developments such as unit trusts and occupational pension schemes , which its founding fathers never contemplated .
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