Example sentences of "and [adv] [pron] have [adv] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 He did n't think she threw knives these days and mercifully she had n't sung ‘ The Cowboys ' Christmas party ’ since their time in Chelsea .
2 And luckily we 've both got a very good alibi for last night .
3 The idea seems to be that you have tacitly accepted the protection of the laws and thereby you have tacitly undertaken to obey them .
4 , that contract is now completed , the infrastructure contract on site itself has been let , and er , we have now resolved all the , the issues that were on that site , and effectively we 've already sold two of the plots off that site before .
5 She was a mutilated machine , and besides she has already forgotten him : I am meant to be comforted by that ?
6 And besides I have n't said I 'll take the job yet ! ’
7 And besides I have n't finished with the question of patriotism .
8 And so we 've merely spelt that out on the second page of our standard conditions of service .
9 And so we had n't sent them .
10 He had kept his promise to Holmes , and so he had not accepted the Stapleton 's invitation to their house that evening .
11 So I wanted to remain a listener , still be excited by other people 's music and so I 've always remained a listener .
12 and so I 've always associated them with sort of erm , you know , what people had before all those sticky labels came
13 ‘ She 's only seven years older than me and so I 've never looked on her as a mother figure .
14 I suppose the problem was that I had never been told about it officially — that is , by an adult — and so I had somehow blocked off the information , not connecting it with myself , with my own body .
15 and so she 's not come out .
16 ‘ The DTI does not under-estimate the problems likely to be encountered in respect of some of these blocks and so it has not offered any acreage which it believes would be impossible or completely impractical to explore .
17 And so it has now set its ‘ education and outreach ’ department ‘ to encourage young people from across Britain to use their music and song to tell their stories ’ .
18 The kind of variation revealed by occasional spellings as primary evidence does not always fit comfortably into the standard historical linguistic mould , and so it has often seemed convenient to ignore it or explain it away , sometimes on the grounds that variability of the kind apparently attested is ‘ impossible ’ .
19 Alida Thorne is a lonely woman , but it is easy enough to make an effort , to understand and accept and perhaps I have not tried .
20 She told Chola she 'd heard from someone in Pere that the bull was ill , and she knew she 'd be able to cure it : she 'd treated hundreds in her time and only one had ever died .
21 The same papers are read by those kids and by the coppers who nick them , and basically they 've both swallowed the same lies .
22 Mother actually calls me Lisa but I did not think that name appropriate to this strange meeting and anyway I have never liked it .
23 and thus We have already seen how the ideal gas equation ( 4 ) can be derived from equation ( 14 ) .
24 But he 's also saying is n't he at the end of this paragraph , or he 's implying that th this is this revolution is not happening because we the communists are making it happen , it is happening and we need to react to it and somehow we 've therefore got a choice , we can either trail behind or we can lead it .
25 * Palfrey 's full name is Horatio Benedict de Palfrey , but , as he explains earlier , ‘ you may forget the first two ( names ) immediately , and somehow nobody has ever remembered the ‘ de ’ at all . ’
26 It was nearly five-thirty and still they had not arrived .
27 Eight weeks of collecting the order and still they have n't paid a penny .
28 He had been there in the palace at Tongjiang with her , and still he had not visited her bed .
29 ‘ I 'm twice that and still I have n't hunted .
30 Today he has been dead for several years , and still I have n't told the story .
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