[ adv ] not only so, but <adv.all> I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice
I said, yeah, I've kissed her a few times.
"Oh, yeah, we're ready," said Andy Van Slyke, the Pittsburgh centerfielder.
"You can't expect the bosses to sit there with some opportunity and think, oh yeah, how about that guy sitting up in the woods.
But what made it easier to accept was, yeah, (E.S.M.) lost some money playing in the market, but I never looked at it as not being their money."
They're out _ Q. Mr. President _ A. Oh yeah, you get a follow-up.
"I'm worried, yeah, but I've got to make a living," said one woman who said she was a prostitute and declined to give her name.
When we'd come back and tell the other kids where we'd been, they'd say 'Oh, yeah, sure.'
This is the last one _ yeah? Q. Mr. President, we all noticed yesterday that you didn't want to use the word "blockade."
"If the overall question is do I expect to see incentives continuing, yeah, I do," he told reporters.
I've got time for one _ yeah, Kathy? Q: Mr. President, there's been some speculation you might name an Hispanic this time and make history in doing so.
In L.A., yeah, that's all it is." Bryson is a visible celebrity in Atlanta.
"Talk to cardiac surgeons whose hands are often in blood," says Dr. Sheldon Wolff, an infectious disease expert at New England Medical Center. "They often nick themselves and yeah, it bothers the hell out of them.
"People write and say, `Woman in Mind' is rather sad at the end, isn't it?' and I say, `Well, yeah.
"Oh yeah, he created quite a stir," said Gordon West, a manager at the Mission Ridge ski area. "He had every lady going `ooh ah ooh.'
Nice guy _ yeah," Bush said sarcastically.
"Oh yeah, yeah, the patch," says the other.
"Oh yeah, yeah, the patch," says the other.
Oh yeah, this is Utopia what we're doing now.' Our convoy had passed through the Thames Barrier and was reaching the fringes of the metropolis.