Example sentences of "i [vb base] [adv] we " in BNC.

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1 Let , let us leave it till then because I mean otherwise we 're gon na get bogged down in this and whe when we really are briefing procedures .
2 Well er I mean eventually we 'd have to think of something .
3 I mean either we 're not there or there 's too many of us there .
4 I mean increasingly we see that we 're , we get more constables here more constables there , but they do n't ever appear to be actually out on the streets , and until we can get more men on the streets with the deterrent effect that their appearance has , let alone anything else , we are not gon na get much further .
5 But I mean I I expect , I mean even we had some left over e eventually you could sell them to our own members because they 'd all want to use it
6 I mean here we are , we 've been talking about taking holidays in this area , and I imagine that much of the work that you do as a local Tourist Board is not actually directly aimed at people who live in this area .
7 No matter , what I mean why we all seem to wearing black , because they 're
8 Yes I mean in a sense that just sort of shows that a lot of people would agree with Lakehoff in the sense that they think that women use a lot of tag questions and have that speech style , erm I mean like we 've been able to see , and what we can say is that men and women 's language is different er and it 's even possible to say in what way it 's different , but the difficulty becomes when we actually want to say why those differences are .
9 When you , when you look and you see how people survived and of course they delivered the that you , I mean like we had dripping and bread .
10 I mean you 'll spend just what you wan na spend in Spain , I mean like we , the night , when we went the first time , we took an ice box , but oh , we
11 Well no , well I mean like we do I mean I mean but I mean my gross up about three hundred over Tony 's but I put in many hours right ?
12 I mean like we 've had er woman
13 Yeah well we 've got set jobs but I mean like we 'll say look I 'll do post for you today if you do it for me like whenever
14 you know a legal document , but I mean maybe we can reach some sort of middle ground that would be a kind of guidelines and
15 I mean maybe we ca n't all be the same there 's something at fault and you saying people who I think .
16 I mean technically we do have an entitlement to visits in that Janet was was reminding me the other day that that we said , when Deborah was here , that everybody was entitled to four visits a year .
17 Yeah and , and if you could , I mean the thing is , if you 're , if er , if we did n't have each other to go off with erm it would have made everything for us a lot different , I mean okay we 're lucky we 're in a situation where we do know a lot of people who are , who are like- minded
18 do we want to erm go I mean obviously we want to go away and I 'll do it with my friend and you 'll do it your
19 Oh yes , there is I mean obviously we do n't do that for seventy pounds because we could n't obviously .
20 Yes and that means forty percent does n't it if you know what I mean so we can make an assumption that Hydro Electric comprise a chunk of that
21 I mean then we might not .
22 I mean then we did n't even go into Fulford , we stopped there .
23 I mean there we are we 've got a er purveyors of er intoxicating liquor allowing children to go in to their bars or hang around outside .
24 I mean now we 're still , you know we 're still er er if Freud did write about this , we 're still living with , with the consequences of this .
25 Yes I mean basically we need to first of all decide , I think this is what we 're deciding in the first instance , which option for the provision of information you find the most helpful .
26 I mean basically we have had organize it this year .
27 I mean basically we go there and the meat shop do n't we ?
28 have n't got it right actually , I mean basically we can go up the top shop and buy what we like ca n't we ?
29 I mean suddenly we had the example of a women 's support group from the miner 's strike th that we had the idea you know fr from that erm and Yona really put it in a nutshell when she said I think er er you know behind closed doors the women worrying about what was gon na happen next you know they felt very frustrated and in a way it was a way to channel o our energies away i i i it was seen as that really in the beginning you know as a a sort of a more as a way of getting rid of the well y you know the sort of desperation er the impotence one felt of not being able to do anything in this situation and it 's er and by now of course we 've all become as a group very close er you know we 're we 're more like a big family now really an sort of er a lot of the women have never really sort of regularly been to meetings an th the commitment there is very strong really that we all turn up to our Tuesday meetings sort of .
30 I mean hopefully we will attract money because we ca n't function without it .
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