Example sentences of "[be] say [be] [that] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ One of the things that has been said is that it 's actually very difficult to get a purchaser for your shares on the USM even though in theory it 's an open market .
2 When it comes down to it , all you 're saying is that the likes of Tina Turner and Mick Hucknall have created a bloated travesty of soul .
3 ‘ So what you 're saying is that Bernard 's the only person who knows when the hit on Mobuto 's going to take place ? ’
4 I mean you could have , if you have basically what we 're saying is that you have a whole load of of subject reports and on the top of it you 've got form tutor report
5 But what you 're saying is that when you accelerate — when you go faster and faster in an upwards direction — as you did coming out of that big drop — it 's like adding extra gravity .
6 So what you 're saying is that erm as most people are s such a high percentage of people in the flats , have pr have erm serious problems , it means it 's basically th basically that all all their energy goes into actually trying
7 If I 've got this right , then what you 're saying is that I do n't need to feel any jealousy about the multiplicity of your sexual partners , because you 're married .
8 ‘ What you 're saying is that unless I postpone my return to England Grantham and Marsh do n't stand an iceberg 's chance in hell of getting your account ? ’ she asked baldly .
9 What you 're saying is that by committing suicide in 1977 , none of this could occur . ’
10 No they 're not the realities , because what we 're saying is that we have to modernize the policies of the Labour Party , but the policies are absolutely based in our traditional concerns , I mean , let me give you an example , when Beveridge was talking about unemployment , and the life long need for people to work , he was talking about a male workforce , where it was a man supported by a non-working wife , now we still have at the absolute heart of our concerns in the Labour Party peoples need to work , but we 're now talking about a situation , where women are sharing with their husbands the role of bed breadwinner , and in many families the woman is the sole breadwinner , and therefore our policies about employment and the economy recognize that the world has changed , our principles are the same , but the world to which we 're applying it is very different , and , again , on that you see there would be no distinction between the so-called traditionalists and the so-called modernizers .
11 I mean effectively what you 're saying is that York has got a capacity for about another three thousand three hundred dwellings ?
12 Erm I I get the impression from what you 're saying is that there is a distinct strategic view which should be taken about York and its role , which in a way would tend to limit the amount of housing development you should be putting in and around York .
13 The difference is that the cow , the cow herder or the shepherd is not particularly interested in consciously realizing that , whereas it seems to me that what you 're saying is that he is .
14 That Mr Chairman , to hear Councillor say that , because all we 're saying is that these council officers are n't doing their job , did n't they inspect these buildings ?
15 okay , so the , there , what you 're saying is that the , the rural wage is a sub a subsistence wage , which is im by definition , sort the minimum wage you require to live on and er , there are possibilities of much higher incomes else elsewhere , so the , the subsistence wage itself may well act as quite er , strong sort of push factor out of the rural areas , let alone erm , high wages in er , er , the urban areas .
16 But what you 're saying is that ideas , if acted upon , do the opposite .
17 Yes but what you 're saying is that if you stay how you are now you 're not going to get enough orders .
18 Er clearly what we 're saying is that that there would be a thirty percent reduction on the A sixty one either side of the town centre .
19 Could well be negated because all we 're saying is that the counter argument to it is we 're simply conforming with the structure plan .
20 The implication of what you 're saying is that these hundred hectares plus can be found between the York City boundary and the inner boundary of the greenbelt ?
21 Well they 're getting increasing control , increasing control but not and er so yo what you 're saying is that , is that even if , if you go back to the reality of nineteen forty eight , actually they did n't realize they were going to get that control as quickly .
22 Well , but we , no we 're not saying that , what we 're saying is that we so all we 're trying , w w w that they were saying we ca n't go from cap er from feudalism to socialism but we do n't want to go just from feudalism to capitalism , we want to go into er if you like a capitalism with socialist characteristics .
23 Well what you 're saying is that me and ought to talk to her
24 So , really what you 're saying is that if we 're looking at trip wires to stop things happening , there 's a powerful a really powerful case for a pensioner trustee looking for whistle blowers .
25 What they 're saying is that Colin was purely administration .
26 It 's very clumsy language but I think what what they 're saying is that if you go to the tribunal and you get compensation , anything they pay you now is going to have to come off that .
27 So what you 're saying is that these are associated .
28 So what we 're saying is that you can take the correlation coefficient , multiply it by N minus two divided by one minus R , square root it first , and you convert it to a T. R P is the correlation coefficient ca calculated by the way we 've j that that 's just a little squiggle
29 S But but y what what you 're saying is that if someo Have you seen the book by the way ?
30 Right so on , on that er on that basis then what we 're saying is that erm you would need erm sufficient funds so that your wife would be able to have an income of s of twenty thousand pounds a year
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