Example sentences of "we 'd got " in BNC.

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1 I was afraid it might come out that we 'd got a cut as well .
2 ‘ Needless to say , ’ said Fonda , ‘ they would n't touch it , but Bert Schneider asked what else we 'd got .
3 You see , we 'd got such confidence that she told me that when he died , she said , ‘ He died in his bed here ’ , that we were in , you see ; and she said , ‘ I then closed his eyes and I laid down with him till the morning so that nobody should be disturbed . ’
4 He told us we 'd got a yellow streak a yard wide down our backs .
5 It meant me having to dash back to England because my passport was at home , and we 'd got no tickets .
6 W. S. We 'd got into Rose Hill station at the end of duty , and if one man did n't come in , they 'd send a search out .
7 We 'd got fifty people coming , no less counting the women-folk .
8 It was nearly six o'clock , and we 'd got forty minutes to wait .
9 She knew we 'd got a clue , even if she did n't know what it was .
10 We discovered that we 'd got a lot of unnecessary parts — things that were over-indulgent — so we chucked 'em out . ’
11 This album was actually recorded back in 1990 , just after we 'd played with Lloyd Cole , so we 'd got to know each other pretty well .
12 With that she marched off , and after we 'd got our breath , I made the usual cup of tea while Frankie went to fetch nails and hammer from Dad 's tool box so he could fix the door before Mum returned and explanations were necessary .
13 Mum was pleased as punch when she saw what we 'd got , particularly when the men arrived with the brass bedsteads and a red striped flock mattress .
14 We 'd got our guy . ’
15 ‘ I firmly believe United would have won the title but for Wembley , while if we 'd got there we would n't have gone up .
16 We 'd got a good relationship with the council . ’
17 By the time we 'd got out of there I 'd received two ‘ love letters ’ from a couple of nine-year-olds and pocketfuls of poems and drawings .
18 There was nothing for me to do , I was too young to get a work permit , and mum was determined we were n't going to start breaking the law the minute we 'd got there , so she called Auntie Muriel and Auntie Muriel said why not .
19 She was plugged with everything we 'd got .
20 Upon being introduced by the special needs coordinator as the new tutor to a group of students with severe learning difficulties , I heard several groans of ‘ Oh no , we thought we 'd got rid of you … ’ .
21 Once they 'd done with our , figures and our faces then we 'd got to look for our innards and so we had had to have inner cleanliness .
22 We 'd got up with the rest at 4.00 am and stumbled , steep-blind on a starry night into stony darkness : another alpine day had started in night .
23 ‘ He did once say to me that we did n't know what we 'd got a hold of .
24 The stairs were just as wet and dangerous as when we 'd got on .
25 and erm , we 'd got there and a young lady came along delivering milk you know with a big milk float and she put the , the twins Brenda and
26 And then we had the er the battledress was issued , the khaki , and erm we was had our head headquarters were started , the headquarters were started in an office at , one of the office rooms at the at the Bloxwich Lock and Stamping Company by the , the top offices we used to call them , by the gates , we had one of the rooms there for and it eventually became the armoury when we got some equipment because rifles etcetera was in very short supply after Dun Dunkirk So eventually we had a few rifles and er when the er we got a few rifles and er the sirens went it was the practice at the beginning when the sirens went in this area for everything to stop and everyone down the shelter but it happened four or five times , everybody realized how non-productive this was , that the time that was lost and there was nothing happening in this area so it was decided by the R T B that we , the , the people off the shop floor would n't stop work until the attack was really imminent or it had started because if this , this was happening all over the Midlands area and of course if you , if you multiply that by the number of people at work you can imagine how much production was lost erm and also when the sirens went Major at the factory used to get the chappies out from off the shop floor , get the few rifles we 'd got , take we in to King George 's playing fields there was a , a brook running across King George 's playing fields then , it had n't and a trench which was extended to stop er aircraft from landing in King George 's cos it was just a big open space .
27 Well when the sirens went at the beginning , what few rifles we 'd got , he 'd er take us out and string we out along this brook , a rifle every so often and and facing one way and looking round to see when anything goes up and in case anybody come over or anything come over and er that was the initial start .
28 They 'd come from the other way from er Snade Lane not Broad Lane , they 'd come up from they 'd come farther round , round and come in th in round the back sort of thing and we we 'd got no headquarters any more .
29 We put on a display of marching or and er weaponry we 'd got in King George 's playing fields and er talk about the weapons er er er br brings to mind we had a , a weapon that was a anti-tank weapon and it was a Robin Robinson Heath er contraption made up of a tube , cast iron tube on a three legged tripod with er a hinge ring on the one end which had a recess for a cap and a trigger to , to fire this cap .
30 Also when we was giving this demonstration for the people in Bloxwich for the , our unit in King George 's playing fields , we 'd got all our weaponry on , on , on show what we 'd got Vickers machine gun , the Brownings rifles this anti-tank bomb anti-tank tube , whatever you li gun , whatever you like to call it , but also we 'd got what , what was termed a bucket bomb .
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