Example sentences of "[pers pn] [pron] [pron] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 In the next house you see I shall have to have different seating , they , they , I 'm going to , I 'm going to get somewhere smaller , so that three piece suite , it owes me nothing it only cost me what seven hundred pounds
2 During the last war intelligence experts came to rely upon Ultra so heavily that if Ultra intercepts told them nothing they automatically assumed the Germans were doing nothing .
3 gardening catalogue ready , yes I got one there they keep sending me them I never Astor no
4 I I have to say that we we I I we just we just see that we point out to people it 's an even bigger po position of trust .
5 Erm I just do n't I I I simply want to make the point that the protection of the countryside for its own sake is planning policy which must be brought within the of that criterion .
6 No I I I just want to move it around a bit Vernon .
7 I I I just wonder what the opposition would think if you decided that the criteria approach alone was not acceptable and you equally decided you had n't enough information to specify a location , where would that leave you ?
8 I I I just wondered with the so-called if staff members independent advice , erm , on what is best for them to do with superannuation pension scheme .
9 I I I just hear it when never freed any more hostages .
10 Really I I I just go out mainly , I 'm not , not cos I do n't , I just , I go out because there 's nothing else to do and it 's boring being stuck in on your own all the time !
11 I I I just do n't know whether that is right .
12 I 'm very very , very , very , tied up with it , I I I invariably turn relatively happy with it all .
13 Er I I I Otherwise
14 I I I honestly , look what he 's drawn me for rag .
15 No I I I honestly do n't know I mean we fetched Mrs home to bury her but I mean that was oh nineteen fifty odd .
16 Mm I I I still think the middle .
17 And I I I never I never thought to ask you about if you cut peats now .
18 Yes I I erm I I I certainly do er and
19 I I I really I
20 Yeah I keep , when I I I always scrape the vegetables sometimes but when I do though I keep cutting my fingers !
21 Er and I well remember er even as early as nineteen nineteen the election which took place immediately after world war one , I remember being er sort of dragged round the streets , you know , er I think it was enjoyable , I do n't know er by my mother , er attending these street meetings , er I I I very well remember it because I had a a a new coat , a new coat for for er for this particular venture , and er the two things you know are fairly deep in my memory .
22 I I I only had one one illness in my life until last year .
23 Yeah well I I I obviously I would say this but er I think it 's the best opportunity that people have for a career direction because we we 've redirected a lot of people 's careers in this aspect .
24 But I cert I I I I I ju I it it just sounds you know two hundred pounds a month , just over two hundred pound a month
25 I it it still seems to me every time I read the policy that it 's a lot more flexible than most people are giving it credit for frankly .
26 And then , for the first time ever in my life , I what I normally do is I have sort of maybe some questions that I definitely pre-plan and if I 'm lucky one or two of them , and this paper all three of my prepared questions actually came up exactly as I 'd worded them , or near enough .
27 In some elusive way , here before me was the representative of something , some enormous sphere of sensations and transcendent values such as I had only read about , something my Maker had withheld from me which I desperately needed .
28 My Lords , before the Noble Lord sits down , perhaps I could ask him to remember , he was saying s how , how splendidly the Lord Chancellor and the Chancellor of the Duchy appointed magistrates and I entirely agree , but they appoint them , not from a list that they 've constructed themselves , they appoint them because the keepers of the roles for respective counties propose names to them which they very carefully er selected by the very special and an an and complicated process of of er of er of of examination of people whose names come forward , I find in my case that only one-third of the people whom I interview for this purpose with my Committee er are the ones which I 've I propose .
29 Douglas was glad to acknowledge Miller 's help and told the Royal Society that he had received some coconuts ‘ germinated in this country by the industrious Mr. Miller , by whose care and skill they were brought to this perfection ; and besides he very freely communicated to me for the good of the publick his own methods in management in raising them which I here desire may be read in his words . ’
30 ‘ Why do n't you tell me who you really work for ?
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