Example sentences of "[verb] and [adv] we [verb] " in BNC.

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1 we 've got two subcontractors that we get in touch with , they just do it and then bill owes and then we uplift it
2 Yes , yes , well I am too , and that we shall pay the penalty later on if we do n't get with us and I feel that erm , as difficult as the budget is , as tight as it is with reduction etcetera , I feel that we should make a positive funding for prevention or something , or er , because I think unless we do start somewhere , and quickly , we are going to pay the penalty at the end of the and so we 've got to make a date , you 've got to make a year , and if you wait and say and well we have n't got it now , well next year we shall say we have n't got it now , and the next year we 'll say we have n't got it now .
3 And then another lunch was estimated at two hundred and eighty and forty-five came , and it kept swinging like that all week and they never knew what the hell was going to happen so they got really aggravated and then we had , you know , some of the kids , the Ban-the-Bezier group were wandering around with their face masks and their Type ninety bags over their heads and were saying crude things over a megaphone in Tom Quad , right and then these bowler hatted policemen , whoever they are , were patiently explaining to a number of girls who were sunbathing on the lawn that this was n't done quite that way here .
4 Edward managed to retrieve the canoe and got it uprighted and then we heard Marge and Jerry on the opposite shore yelling that they were OK .
5 ‘ He showed a lot of courage at Leeds on Sunday as we already had two players injured and then we had two sent off .
6 The County Council 's view has always been , before you face that hurdle , let's agree or get the principle accepted and then we move as quickly as we possible er as we possibly can towards a preferred erm location .
7 The only time it comes in useful is when we 're talking about acting and then we have a kind of shorthand .
8 That is obviously something which we 've just got to keep topping up but it was recognised by the fathers that will there was we needed to be helped to train to sell and so we needed that training er to get us get us going so to speak , there were no natural salesmen amongst departments .
9 It took about six weeks for the fever to go and then we got sulphur candles to fumigate the house from top to bottom .
10 erm the roads are really not , not made to cope and so we have to try to get people coming in from different areas and different directions so that we do n't get everybody on one road and nobody on another .
11 I cursed but did as he requested and afterwards we slipped down the darkened stairway out of the main door where Benjamin had ordered a sleepy-eyed groom to bring round the horses .
12 Anyway I comes out to here and said do n't go near that door , open the back door very careful , there 's three kids got and then we went out and chase the buggers .
13 We had 4 class midfielders , one was sold and now we play with just 3 .
14 I suppose one of the things I use to demonstrate it most clearly is that for many years I s I gave lectures on communications and one of the things I used to say in those lectures was I did not know , and I was stressing that sense what came first if newspapers write stories in a particular way , because that is what the public wanted or do public want a particular type of story and that 's that newspapers round-up and I stopped posing that question when Rupert Murdoch bought the Melbourne Sun because Rupert Murdoch bought the Melbourne Sun and introduced a lot of sex-type stories you know stories about brothels and madames whipping people and goodness knows what else and the sales rocketed and there we had almost a captive example of change in the design of change in the type of stories that were written and people , people were buying it and so you have an issue of you know that your content was actually being by what your readership wanted .
15 But it , it did and , and I think there again a little bit of Guild influence because when er we were at meetings we would say , well what are you going to do about the er drapery you know and eventually we did get this better erm you know , drapery .
16 A schoolfriend , Jimmy Goddard , was similarly inspired and together we formed The Ley Hunters Club .
17 Er we evaluate the need and how many people want to go on it , we evaluate what it 's gon na cost and then we see if we can get money through the the safety budget that director safety holds .
18 We showed how to achieve certain basic patterns by using the processes that we discovered and then we saw how they could be combined to achieve a large class of patterns .
19 By now many will be itching to get moving and so we turn immediately to the question : how can we get on with it ?
20 She said and then I have two weeks erm homework to mark and then we have a weeks holiday I thought well that 's two weeks
21 In strong winds we do n't want beginners to be overpowered and so we reduce the sail area , that 's known as reefing .
22 Well the , the fourth point in relation to er we say that the point has been fully pleaded , corsation is a question of fact , the , er , it 's not an issue which we say arises on these preliminary issues and can raise it er under order eighteen , rule nineteen , if they so wish , that is traditionally the places where it seems nexus points arise erm and they will put in , er app , we will put in , the defendants will put in appropriate evidence at that point , depending upon whether the , the strike out allows evidence and how they frame their strike out , but the nexus point is fully pleaded , we set out step by step and in relation to er restrictions how they were caused the loss , my Lord at that point , at this point we believe that 's all we have to do and certainly we believe that it be sufficient to get over a strike out
23 On occasions consequential loss or liability cover can be provided and therefore we qualify exclusion by saying ‘ not specifically provided for by this Policy ’ .
24 well in relation to the standard form contract there are cases er based upon prim er primarily article eighty five , one A which says agreements fixing terms and conditions , for with in article eighty five , it 's based upon the facts that the , the , the decisions of the commission and the court , say that elements of secondary competition can be restricted and here we have a standard form contract which restricts all elements of secondary competition
25 We made some changes and they worked and then we made some changes that did not work .
26 We 're frightened of what will happen and sometimes we have need to be frightened , you know , they are going to do very different things because they disagree violently with us .
27 There 's a latency between the primary changing and the secondary data changing since the primary will change and then we replicate across the network to each secondary location .
28 The reader is urged to continue reading and so we find that Dickens has succeeded in one of the most difficult aspects of a novel — providing an exciting opening for it .
29 And Heidi was going to phone to say what time she wanted collecting and so we 'd got to be back could n't be out too long could we ?
30 There is money around and money helps and here we stub on another English prejudice .
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