Example sentences of "and [pron] [pron] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Inevitably there was a lot of sycophantic non sense around her too.Thus when she made a blood donation , the director of the clinic declared that the room would remain a shrine for her and everyone who now had a transfusion would insist that it was her divine blood that flowed and miraculously and potently into his veins .
2 And everyone who ever lived and died .
3 Yeah I was thinking of the lights and them we hardly use the lights .
4 And them she suddenly wondered if her son and Lee … she dismissed the idea equally swiftly ; she would know .
5 ‘ I 've been through so much more trouble than Sean , but he 's famous and nothing he ever does is secret .
6 I , I can remember Mollyrange sixty years ago and it was a very very different place , between you and me it really was .
7 LONELY among the Indians whom they had subjugated , and whom they therefore feared , the Spanish squireens who settled in Central America almost five centuries ago kept themselves to themselves , and married their children to those of their friends .
8 Attila reveres the strength of the mother who crushes him , and whom he hysterically , jubilantly betrays .
9 Mannheim , whose work Eliot read after 1937 and whom he frequently met , has been discussed by Kojecky .
10 But when — suddenly — for no apparent reason your twin rejects the offer of marriage from the man you always believed she loved , and whom you always loved yourself ; when she turns round and says you can marry him yourself if you feel that strongly about him … suddenly your world is upside down .
11 Lek , the thirty-year-old maid installed for her along with the furniture by the Committee , telling her about the nine children and the mother up-country she supports and whom she rarely sees .
12 Zenobia was also the first name of my paternal grandmother who lived and died in Nigeria and whom I never met .
13 In his ‘ A Study of English poetry ’ , which ran in The English Review from March to June 1912 , Newbolt refers to Pound as ‘ a critic , who is himself a poet , and whom I always read with great interest ’ .
14 In the Poetry Review for February , 1912 , a critic , who is himself a poet , and whom I always read with great interest , speaks of the struggle ‘ to find out what has been done , once and for all , better than it can ever be done again , and to find out what remains for us to do ’ … .
15 Mrs Nicholas Beaumont , whose husband is Clerk of the Course , and whom I only saw in the distance ; Mr and Mrs Oliver Sherwood , Major and Mrs Peter Wiggin , Mr and Mrs Tim Dawson , Mr Harry Middleton , Mrs Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie , Colonel and Mrs Tommy Wallis , and their daughter Mrs Charles Baker ; Mr and Mrs John Guest , Mrs Tom Scott , Mr Peter Dimmock , and Mrs George Beeby .
16 I asked for it at the suggestion of my cousin Sarah , who was slightly older than me and whom I greatly admired .
17 But I went to a pipe bag championships in Beeston and I myself completely .
18 I pass a great variety of them on the way to school and I myself actually live , work and play in some of them .
19 In the sixteen years since , it has sold 75,000 copies , and people are still finding it helpful , and I myself often take a chapter for meditation , when my own spirit feels low and dry .
20 And I we just feel that can not go along thinking it 's never gon na happen to you .
21 Erm and I I just think th th the wording of policy E Ten is It it does n't square with er national guidance for erm which requires areas to be left out of the greenbelt to provide for long-term development opportunities or development potential long-term development .
22 I want somebody whose sitting there listening to the radio sort of er just relaxed and I I just want you to pick up the phone and ring .
23 all the consultation that also talks about in this paper is met with the two centres , the management committee of Highfields youth and commune centre and also the users of the Moat Centre and I think in light of everything that 's gone on I think it 's substantially a success to stand here and say that we have at least achieved some result and I I formally would welcome the Libs supporting this this afternoon and I 'm grateful for the turn that the Libs have made and in light of er what er Mr the involvement Mr has put in .
24 Erm but I , you know if you said I think you see , I think what Colin 's raising is a very interesting and important issue and I I naturally you know as a senior manager I 'm concerned about it .
25 And I would go in and I I never said nothing to him at first did I ? but I just could n't take it any more .
26 Er , the I I also make the point , that er , my understanding is having now talked to a number of the other C A B's , that in fact they were looking to Thamesdown money advice centre because this money was actually to replace funds that previously had been er , available through the Allied Dunbar sponsorship scheme , and which has , which I gather was withdrawn er , at very short notice , and they were looking to Thamesdown to er provide that support and resource as a county resource , and I I therefore felt that it was right to bring it forward .
27 no offence meant and I I really hope that you do not take offence in that way .
28 And I I really do n't think they have any business without consulting you and me , as the peoples that they represent , because I 'm I 'm a voter in North Yorkshire too , so I do n't think they have any business actually doing this without consulting us first of all .
29 And I I really want officially to thank Celia for what she 's done .
30 And I I really ca n't count your timeshare marketing that 's only for four months this year .
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