Yes Honestly - The Complete Series 1 [DVD]

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Yes Honestly - The Complete Series 1 [DVD]

Yes Honestly - The Complete Series 1 [DVD]

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Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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NIKKI- If you’re going through depression and/or anxiety you’re supposed to sleep, aren’t you, you’re supposed to switch everything off. HUW- Well, I think I’d say gently they’re totally different. You can have an overlap. I mean, I’m generally quite an anxious person, but I’m not depressed. Does that make sense? In that original series, John Alderton and Pauline Collins had starred as husband and wife Charles and Clara Danby. Here, Donal Donnelly and Liza Goddard were husband and wife Matthew and Lily Browne. NIKKI- And Mark, the government’s stance is that they haven’t rolled out Evusheld yet because they don’t know how effective it is against the Omicron variant of COVID and other more recent variants. Why do you and others still want it? EMMA- And is that one of your big strategies for managing your mental health? And what are your other strategies or management tools that you use?

Cook with love, as John says. But other than that, it was just a really good experience and it just made me a lot more confident on TV. Love Island was an unusual experience and the way MasterChef’s gone so far – I’m absolutely buzzing! HUW- One of my colleagues said to me, just after I’d kind of spoken about it first of all, ‘Oh you’re very brave doing that, you’ve got to be a bit careful about these things because the BBC doesn’t want people thinking there’s some kind of nutter reading the Ten’.Of course, both have and have got are used in the imperative sense, equivalent to “must.” Interestingly, in AmE (not sure about BrE), we seem to use have got in this context when we want to add emphasis, for example: You have GOT to see this movie. You HAVE to see this movie works too, but it just doesn’t sound as forceful. Likewise, you’d almost never hear the negative or question forms of have got used in this context ( I don’t have to go to work today is common, whereas I haven’t got to go to work today doesn’t sound quite right to me. PAUL- So, Evusheld is a preventative prophylaxis treatment, so it’s two types of antibody that can fight COVID-19. And it’s designed for people who can’t get protection from vaccines so that they can have this treatment instead and it will give them protection against COVID-19.

Language can be used to describe reality from any number of different perspectives and the difference between I have and I have got is no more than a change of perspective on the same aspect of reality. When it comes to how to teach it, however, that’s an entirely different matter and I never did work out a satisfactory method. Some students just ‘get it’ and others, who possibly share some of Aaron’s less agile cognitive processes, just don’t get it and never will. NIKKI- Paul, I’m going to start with you. What exactly is Evusheld and why does Lupus UK want Evusheld to become available? PAUL- Vaccines what they do is encourage your immune system to create its own antibodies against the virus. Whereas in people who are immune suppressed or immune compromised their immune system doesn’t recognise the vaccine and produce those antibodies. What Evusheld is it’s just giving you those antibodies straightaway so that they are then in your body and your own immune system doesn’t need to create them. PAUL- Yeah, so NICE, who decide or make recommendations about which treatments the NHS should use, they met to appraise this treatment, look at the evidence that’s available, and hear from expert clinicians and patients to ultimately make a decision about whether Evusheld will be made available on the NHS. So, they met earlier this week, and hopefully will get a draft recommendation within the next couple of weeks, which will give us an indication of whether Evusheld will be made available or not, and to whom it might be available. Because it may not be made available to everyone who’s on immune suppressant medication; it might be just those who are a higher risk. It’s quite a broad category. The formula for constructing this type of sentence is present auxiliary + past participle, not present aux. + past tense.”HUW- That’s if I’m allowed to do it. But I would love to do that because I think that’s going to be quite spectacular. All this stuff about cut-price Coronation, forget that. I think they’ll do a good show. I don’t know, I’d say to both of you and to everyone listening really taking stuff for granted in life is one of the worse things you can do. I kind of come into work – sorry, I know you need to finish – if I make a mistake when I’m doing my job that will give me days of worry. No, because I didn't know what the competition was going be like on day one. So, all I wanted to do was not be first out, that was my main thing. Then as the series went on, I suppose the camaraderie took over really. Of course you think ahead, but you don’t want to plan too far ahead because you don’t want to jinx yourself. NIKKI- Hello everyone. I’m Nikki Fox and this is Access All on BBC Sounds. And today I am with a legend, an icon. P.S. Referring to Jon who is worried about the bashing of the word “have got” with his choice of words: “she is got a big nose”. I do not think Jon should be worried anymore since he has just made Aaron’s point of view very clearly, that when we mix a verb in the present and a verb in the past, no matter what the verb is, it will always come out like: “I have ate a pizza” and “I have saw a car”, and “She is got a big nose”. Reply

HUW- I will worry about it. And I will worry about it because, I’ve been doing the job for years and years and years, I’ll worry about it because I’ll think I don’t want people to think that I’m losing my touch or that I’m losing my ability to do the job or that I’m losing my mental sharpness or whatever else. I do worry about it. I think that’s all a good sign. It’s a good sign that you still have the appetite to do the job well. But I’m also aware that as the years go by it is right to make room for younger people and it is right to give encouragement to younger people. And also, this is something that doesn’t happen very often at the BBC by the way, to transfer some skills. They dropped me in to present the Six all those years ago without a day of guidance, without a day of chat with any other presenter. You’re on a voyage of discovery by yourself, and you’re going to make mistakes.

NIKKI- Just so you know, yeah. Very tall. My head comes to his waist. No, in a mobility scooter. But sometimes when I go to hug him I land on his waist. It’s hugely embarrassing, anyway. The other thing I’d say about this job and mental health, it’s to do with the pressure that people are under. Now, this is not saying that journalism is a more pressurised job than anything else, of course it’s not. You’re not operating on people and saving people’s lives, so I’m not making silly comparisons. But you are under daily pressure to deliver. And if you don’t deliver, well there are questions to be asked about your job and whether you can do the job and all the rest of it. So, they are quite important questions about you as an individual, and therefore that daily pressure brings its own issues. EMMA- Also are you still shielding? Because many immunocompromised people are, and they feel that one particular drug might be the key that finally opens their front door. But the NHS aren’t presently funding it.



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