Example sentences of "and when [pron] [verb] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And what happens is , they float around and when they come in contact with a bacterium , they stick into the wall and the D N A tube is inserted through the bacterial wall into the psychoplasm of the bacteria , and the D N A is just pumped into it as if from a hypodermic syringe .
2 And when they stay in hotels they use call boxes in the foyer — to call mummy presumably — rather than the more expensive phones in their rooms .
3 They set out by coach one fine morning , and when they arrived in London , they went straight to Mr Brownlow 's house .
4 I did not speak to her during the journey , and when we arrived in Ruritania , I left the train at Zenda , a small town outside the capital .
5 And when we bear in mind Chairman that piece of land in the first instance was given to the Southwell D C by a Southwell resident .
6 When the Equal Opportunities Commission , in its equality agenda , describes child care facilities as meagre in the extreme compared with the facilities that are available in the rest of Europe , when we know that the women in work to whom the Minister has referred are often forced into part-time work because of inadequate child care arrangements and when we bear in mind his entirely complacent answer , is not it a good thing that a Labour Government are coming who will ensure that child care provision is expanded ?
7 You then whip the cream ( it is easier if you have left it an hour or two in the refrigerator after cooling ) and when it stands in peaks you can turn it in to the muslin or clean napkin with which you have lined an earthenware or metal cheese mould or drainer — which can be improvised by piercing holes in a cheap cake tin or in a tub-shaped carton — and leave it 3 or 4 hours , or overnight .
8 Somewhere there , but off the would n't it be but erm it was an event erm when I had a rise in wages my mother being a dressmaker she used to have a machine under the little front window and when I got a , I had a , they 'd put my wages up to ten shillings , and when I got in mum came over and said what 's the matter with you she said you seem as if you 're walking on air I said I 'd had a rise in wages and it was up from eight and four pence up to ten shillings I do n't know what that seems but still .
9 Colchester was an engineering base , there 's no doubt about that , there was David Paxmans , you must all about , the great big diesel firm , they did some lovely er diesel engines for the high speed trains which , of course , obviously been superseded by electrics , they used to employ three thousand people and when I started in college we did n't enrol their apprentices on the college site , we went to Paxmans and we enroled one hundred apprentices every year on a five year course , that mean they had a five hundred apprentices in a pool , did n't they , just like that !
10 And when I arrived in Lanyon 's house , I took the dose of the drug that returned me to my normal appearance .
11 And when I appeal in parishes Sunday by Sunday I am aware that I meet the very people who made me a missionary .
12 It is covered in ivy by day and by night in mystery and when I lie in bed I see men and women through it passing by .
13 I believe that we achieve this very successfully , and when you bear in mind the pressure under which the Magistracy have been in recent times , with erm industrial action , demonstrations , which have brought them to the forefront of the attention , I think it 's a remarkably achievement that the Magistrates have come through this with the public in general terms satisfied with the performance of Magistrates in the discharge of these very onerous functions .
14 " You will be married here in Ballingolin , " her mother told her , " and when you arrive in Lisbon , you will become the mistress of the Quinta de Santo António . "
15 I do n't think I really expected to see it , but when I did it amused me to follow you , and when you stopped in Wexford it was idle curiosity that prompted my behaviour , nothing else . ’
16 From time to time he would visit his family in Germany and when he left in July 1939 everyone assumed he would return .
17 I knew he had something more than Liza and me because we 'd seen him when he had his bath and when he lay in bed in his short shirt .
18 See horse 's feet 's picked out properly before he goes out exercising and when he comes in exercise .
19 And when he toured in America or Europe , the whole family went too .
20 The lips that had soothed now hardened , and when she stiffened in fright his tongue ran along her mouth with shocking intimacy , easing her lips apart and moving inside to tease her tongue and explore the warmth .
21 Using the alias Frederique Bonlieu , Cabon wrote to Greenpeace claiming she shared their views , and when she arrived in Auckland on 3 April 1985 offered to work for the organisation without salary .
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