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

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1 You 've only been there I think a ba , a term have n't you ?
2 Howes reported back to Branson that evening with the advice that ‘ you 'd better be there yourself tomorrow ’ .
3 ‘ Insulting , then , ’ she agreed quietly , determined not to lose her temper , although if he was going to carry on in that vein the chances of her keeping it for very long were absolutely nil .
4 But poststructuralism precisely does not try to comprehend disintegration , for grasping heterogeneity together is exactly what all totalizing theories have unsuccessfully attempted to do .
5 so 's tonight I 'm a different person cos I 've put make up and I went and got my hair done and I feel different tonight but I do n't feel under pressure that I have to wear make up all the time cos nobody treats me any different whether I 've got make up on or whether
6 ‘ That hour together was just what I did n't want to happen . ’
7 He 'd then offered to come back with her , so that she was n't returning to an empty house alone , at which point — running out of soothing phrases and patience — she 'd told him that alone was exactly what she wanted to be .
8 Ken said my mother 's just been well I 'm not going .
9 His beady-eyed scrutiny of the opening and his fierce clarity and rhetoric elsewhere are peculiarly his own .
10 And then it would just be well it would be a horse ca hearse then .
11 They 're just being really your average thick metal band .
12 For example : ‘ I will be sad that we wo n't all be together at Christmas , but I know that a holiday away is really what I need . ’
13 None of the Martins , as far as Thérèse knew , had ever been inside it .
14 ‘ If you 'd ever been there you 'd know why . ’
15 She had conquered that by an effort of the will which had once been almost her enemy , so strong was it , but had , in enabling her to live calmly among so many enemies in male form , become her friend .
16 But i if while we 've got them we will still be there we will still be called to put them out and one of these days we 'll be dealing with bonfires when somebody 's house is on fire and we need to be there instead .
17 He had a thick crop of wiry hair the colour of good toffee , and heavy eyelashes many shades darker , as lavish as on a Jersey cow , fringing golden-brown eyes of such steady and limpid sincerity that she felt certain he could not possibly be just what he seemed .
18 Am I right in saying that you 've also been very you 've also changed with the times as well , and adjusted
19 It would probably be just what she needed in order to find herself again .
20 I reassured Mrs Jackson that a balanced diet would probably be all she 'd need .
21 Helgersen is blunt in her conclusion : ‘ What business needs now is exactly what women are able to provide . ’
22 but there is n't now is there it just comes splashing out .
23 I mean , I think , I , I think the Empire legally is well I thought it was nine hundred
24 What she had now was twice what she had suffered before this — a love so very agonising , a love without hope because someone else had the right and the claim to him now and that was why he had kissed her that way — to let her know how hopeless it all was .
25 He really was quite something !
26 It was wonderful , it really was then we went into Yor me he took me to Betty 's and York for
27 ‘ He seemed quiet and rather withdrawn that morning , but he very often was so I did n't take too much notice .
28 Akitas here are now what the Japanese would call the ‘ old ’ type , with more variety in colour than would be accepted in its homeland .
29 ‘ And the reasons he decided to leave here are really his business . ’
30 Here are more you could have in the FFL ex-Leeds team :
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