Example sentences of "[pron] do n't [verb] you [adv] " in BNC.

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1 I do n't suppose you even called Serif in order to assess the telephone support available , always enthusiastic and knowledgeable , even on Saturdays .
2 ‘ In which case I do n't suppose you desperately want to join the crowd of people currently queueing up to tell him how wonderful he was ? ’
3 I do n't suppose you ever thought about it , did you ? ’
4 ‘ Sebastian , ’ she addressed her brother the night before she was due to present herself at G Vasey Ltd for interview , ‘ I do n't suppose you still have those specs you wore when you played a professor in — ’
5 I do n't suppose you now what that means at all do you ?
6 I do n't suppose you really got hurt ?
7 I do n't want you around .
8 I do n't want you not to be happy with it
9 I do n't want you here . ’
10 I do n't want you here .
11 I do n't want you here … ’
12 I do n't want you here , ’ he snapped at Beth .
13 I do n't want you here .
14 Her lovely eyes reflecting her confusion and hurt , she wailed helplessly , ‘ I do n't want you here . ’
15 Staring at him , she exclaimed helplessly , ‘ Leo , I do n't want you here !
16 I do n't want you here , sifting through the paperwork , upsetting the system , and generally getting in the way . ’
17 I do n't want you here .
18 But he , he said to the insurance people no I do n't want you just to keep on paying the bills .
19 ‘ Come with me , ’ he says , ‘ I do n't want you out of my sight . ’
20 I will take you out , I do n't want you out with me this time . .
21 I do n't want you anywhere near them , and that 's that . ’
22 ‘ It 's because I do n't want you anywhere near me ! ’
23 I do n't want you late for school on your first day back . ’
24 Lillian Heath wrote to 38-year-old husband Michael in his remand cell to say : ‘ I do n't want you back . ’
25 I do n't want you too cramped .
26 ‘ I need to get away — inside my head — afterwards I 'll — I ca n't now — I do n't want you now . ’
27 You are very fortunate that I do n't make you actually sit in the real sea .
28 I do n't pay you extra one twenty-five to throw my chickens in the garbage .
29 I do n't love you anymore . ’
30 I suppose I do n't love you any more here than when we 're walking together in Ladbroke Grove — how romantic that might sound to a foreigner , by the way — and yet it seems as if I do . ’
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