Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] all been [v-ing] " in BNC.

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1 and now the moment you 've all been waiting for … if of course you entered our Christmas cracker competition … the answers and the winners
2 BERKSHIRE BBC ( , and ) proudly announce the release of the video you 've all been waiting for — ‘ THE WILDE SHOW ’ .
3 We were all asked to sit down — which was absolutely unheard of — and then he said , ‘ Well , I expect you 've all been wondering how you got here … . ’
4 You 've all been playing games with me . ’
5 ‘ I hope you have all been practising during the holiday , ’ said Miss Hardbroom , as the girls all lined up with their brooms hovering next to them and the cats perched on the back — that is to say , most of the cats were perched on the back .
6 We know that Roz 's new book on ‘ tensions ’ , which you have all been waiting for , is about to be published and she is also working on another booklet of machine knitting trims .
7 Preston and London East are already there ( CONGRATULATIONS ! ) and I know you have all been working hard to ensure the National Assessment goes well at the end of November .
8 We 'd all been listening to things like reggae and Spanish music , and when we got together to rehearse , we 'd be playing all kinds of crazy stuff before we settled down to get serious . ’
9 And if it does not do that , we 've all been wasting our time .
10 We 've all been trucking along for so long on the back of the post-war consensus ( more growth , more production , more consumption , more jobs , more energy , more roads , more hospitals , more rubbish , etc ) , that most people are understandably reluctant to get off the treadmill — even though they can see it 's falling to pieces .
11 At last — the book we 've all been waiting for : The A-Z of Good Sex by SHE 's Dr Delvin .
12 We 've all been waiting for you for hours . ’
13 Here are the selections we 've all been waiting for .
14 Hopefully we can go all the way to Wembley , but we 've all been saying in the dressing room that there are some big league games coming up and we have to concentrate on them . ’
15 We 've all been longing to see him .
16 I am still puzzled , to this day , as to why we did n't simply demand a refund and leave ; probably because we had all been looking forward to getting away so much that we were prepared to tolerate anything .
17 But after a week or two it became evident that the various bridgeheads were being held and advances being made ( at what cost we did not then know , but could only guess at ) , and that this was in fact the big event we had all been waiting for .
18 One I remember vividly was when we had all been celebrating someone 's 21st birthday ( how young we all were ! ) .
19 For good measure , and , presumably in case anybody thinks he is indulging in the negative campaigning we have all been hearing so much about , he praises the Lib Dems as offering a ‘ more egalitarian , democratic and ecologically responsible [ manifesto ] than Labour 's ’ .
20 But the downside is that Pinatubo — which had been dormant for 600 years — may have been the reason we have all been reaching for our brollies and in some cases sandbagging the front door over the past few weeks .
21 ‘ The machine has a great potential for use at the centre and its restoration has been a project that we have all been working towards for some while . ’
22 So that in a sense we have all been clipping , fleaing , and paring .
23 That is why we have all been doing it , von Weizsacker , Theo Kordt in London , his brother Erich in Berlin , Canaris , Carl Burckhardt , Dahlerus , Wenner-Gren .
24 They 'd all been amusing enough , in their way .
25 They 've all been listening to the trainer .
26 They 've all been thinking , ’ he said .
27 They 've all been waiting for more than 2 years for plastic surgery at Stoke Mandeville hospital near Aylesbury .
28 Suddenly , above the shouting , shots and noise of battle , the neighing of horses , creaking wheels and ringing harness , came the sound they had all been dreading : the thin , sharp crackle of ice giving way under strain .
29 Soon after England began their reply there was a bad-light hold-up — probably unnecessary if they had all been wearing Bolle ‘ lifter ’ lenses — and upon resumption , Gooch and Stewart had to brace themselves against a torrid onslaught from Waqar , menace in every step of his run-up , and Akram , who bounded in and flung down something resembling Ivanisevic 's curving left-handed tennis serve , if only 30mph or so less swift .
30 This was why they had all been calling him ‘ sir ’ .
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