Example sentences of "[conj] they really [vb base] " in BNC.

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1 This is where they do such good , where they really make a visit worth while and where they learn what ordinary people think , need and feel .
2 ‘ But I think the way we played at Leeds he was something of a luxury sometimes — there were times when even his team mates did n't know what he woeld do next ’ ‘ It 's different at Scumchester United where they really do play through him — AND OF COURSE HE 'S ALSO SURROUNDED BY BETTER PLAYERS ’ …
3 Oh they do yes , well because nowadays , because they got more men on each job now than they really want .
4 So that they really mean they 're going to do that and then
5 And what are the rewards , well what we find and and I must say , I was really touched by it , particularly with some of our our stewards , they say that they really like they love the house and they feel it 's their own .
6 One client may quite sincerely come in just for a form but another client who comes in ‘ just for a form ’ may indicate that they really need help filling it in .
7 The thing that makes this worse is that they really have meant well and were , I believe genuinely concerned .
8 If subjects are difficult intellectually , this can be recommended , as a way of demonstrating what has been covered , but speakers should always make sure that they really have covered the points properly .
9 All I mean is you have to accept that they really have heard it all before — the jokes about taking samples , wearing black stockings , so forth , so fifth .
10 that both Gethwyn and Russell sorted out er who up on on those extremes that you get in a group that , that maybe feel they re that they really have nothing to , hardly anything to do with us they 've do n't receive ministry and why should that be , and after be asked each year , has to go up ?
11 And most single people and er most young people in particular , fall outside that definition and that means that they really have no access to council housing of any kind and er they also find it very hard to get into the private rented sector , because of er the fact that 's it 's er , the rents are so high , and , and therefore they are at the mercy of erm basically the well , well loosely what one could describe as the bad landlords , the sharks , who will er exploit their situation .
12 Some have tried to get round this problem by constructing small scale models of the world that they really want to study , simulating wars , prison situations and so on .
13 And this is , it is true for some p , it 's true for a lot of people , that they really want to be challenged .
14 Well if they can afford to buy in help and to sort their life out , you 've suddenly got a product that they really want to buy .
15 According to my sample of Hull University students , the dreams of Joseph , the Magi , and so on may have been literally true ( according to over half of those questioned ) , but it seems that it would be naive to conclude that they really believe that communications of this sort are still " possible " — that is , presumably they happened in the Bible by some unique divine intervention which will never be repeated .
16 All that they really care about is how to find the cash to pay their taxes , their imports , and the monthly incomes of their workers .
17 But interest is growing in alternative medical systems , both among patients and lay healers who have found them helpful , and among physicians and scientists , who are beginning to find that they really do have something to offer .
18 Oh I see well you 've got 'em you 've that 's why you put em diagonal you see so that they really do show up against the
19 It 's the week after that that they really start playing .
20 They work with children all the time , so they really know what they 're talking about . ’
21 And they really mean it .
22 Some of them are very , very frail and they really get something out of the music , ’ said Mr Harper who likes nothing better than a foot-tapping , clapping and smiling congregation .
23 I just want to read three anecdotes which , and I mean I 've given you sort of odd statistics and the advantage of anecdotes is that they actually put flesh on the bones I think , and they really give you a sense of what it meant to be er a peasant in China in the nineteen thirties .
24 They 're both getting fatter and healthier , and they really enjoy their food now .
25 They take at face value cases such as this one involving the policewomen , and they really believe that they live in a society that has lost all its civilised values .
26 And they really look like it and when you go a load of ash comes out of the end of it .
27 And some , some of their fa , I mean , if they 're lucky enough to have families who do help them that , er that , that 's fine , but I mean a lot of them do n't have anybody at all , and they really have to pay their gas , electric , rent , poll tax , off an absolute pittance !
28 probably had n't paid that much , so these peo the ones that lent the money out , in really they er , and they really have suffered just , they probably thought that if we do n't lend them the money somebody else will and get the interest and they 'll grow bigger and much overtake us , you know , to , to take over our business , so er , so the
29 Although the band formed just three years ago , Take That behave like brothers , and they really do look out for each other .
30 Shock , but after a while their limbs 'll start trembling and they become very confused , now a person , a perfectly nice person , oh , you know , always very helpful and kind can suddenly become aggressive and they really do become aggressive and , if they go to violence their strength , oh where they get it from god only knows , but they could literally throw a person across the room .
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