Example sentences of "[adj] be [conj] you [modal v] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 One great advantage of this is that you can afford to have many more scenes in which your hero questions suspects or witnesses .
2 This is because you will have developed , without necessarily ever having thought about it , some learning style preferences that equip you better for certain stages in the cycle than for others .
3 What I also want you to do on this is if you can refer to Adrian Bull 's book , the Economics of Travel and Tourism , and just go through the relevant chapter on demand .
4 The trouble with presenting Therapy ? as such is that you can paint too damp a picture of them .
5 One of the qualifications for being a Tory is that you can make comments like ‘ adverse comment ’ about a cut of this sort erm and remember that you have heard representations of the strongest sort from very well documented people who are going to be affected by these cuts .
6 You talk about the inevitable ; as I see it , the inevitable is that you will have to move your mainly large-animal practice out into a more rural area , say , ten or twelve miles away .
7 What is even more astonishing is that you can see the Wellestream more easily with every passing year .
8 Thank you the only is that you will have seen organised generally supported that although I think we could support it a lot better than we have .
9 If he does n't , or if he does n't sell anything , you simply call around and take your unsold goods home — that is provided you can find them .
10 ‘ You can come through to the kitchen and help me make the tea , ’ Miss Honey said , and she led the way along the tunnel into the kitchen — that is if you could call it a kitchen .
11 ‘ Because she thought you 'd try to stop her , and she wanted to do this on her own — that 's unless you can think of some other reason .
12 I think though , your lamp you 're gon na have to wait for your lamp because that 's but you can have your desk
13 " Ah , that 's 'cos you might forget something important you have to say , and ask for my help . "
14 That 's if you 'll come . ’
15 That 's if you can find one working .
16 That 's if you can get over the bridge .
17 if ever you get to the stage where the left of the party or the right of the party , either extreme wing , feel that they 've got such power , that they can pull the whole thing their way , the danger is that the bits at the other end will snap and that of course is the disunity danger which had absolutely devastated the Labour party , where the left did exactly that and the moderate centre That 's if you can call it that , snapped off .
18 Yeah , well that 's and you used to get some
19 However many difficulties you have faced , what is certain is that you will have kept on learning , both about the realities of the business world and about yourself .
20 The price you pay for being able to chew when you are young is that you will run out of teeth when you are old .
21 The time of utterance in clock or calendar time does not seem relevant , but what certainly is relevant is that you should know whether this instruction still applies .
22 To cut a long story short , the discovery of the sixties was that you can measure a range of attitudes to each of a group of competing brands , and get a clear , coherent pattern of differences between them : what is more , you can repeat the process at intervals , and monitor changes in these attitudes .
23 ‘ The only difference between the lineouts this year and last is that you can get penalised in a few more areas .
24 Yes , everything , a lot of things are important , and what you 're saying is true Alex , that if you do the important things when you should do them , they wo n't become urgent , but equally what Tracy says is that , is true is that you will get unexpected things cropping up where you have to drop everything .
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