Example sentences of "[adv] you [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Jackets made goal-posts , and : ‘ If you went down you got up with a lump of a cinder in your knee . ’
2 So you go along to the next D and there 's no Os there , so you come down , D , no Os , so you keep going along the lines and every time you get to a D you stop
3 So you end up with a particle if you look at that it 's particles about two or three mills square .
4 So you sit down with The Hook and ask him about what it was like in the '60s in London , when he was lionised by Van Morrison , The Animals , Peter Green and all the gut-bucket R&B bands , but he just laughs and says it was fun .
5 So you nip down to the shop , hand over six quid or so with bad grace , choose — somehow — one set from the enormous and multicoloured collection on offer , zoom home and spend a happy ten minutes snipping , cranking and generally trying to avoid poking your eye out .
6 So you start off on the basis that you will be entitled to a new lease under the 1954 Act provided you take the necessary steps within the time scale set out in the Act .
7 All your horses are out , put your men up they walk round the ring and at seven o'clock you move off to the heath to train your horses .
8 but er if you put it in together you come up with a more realistic erm assessment .
9 Normally you walk back through the wreckage trail to find the mark in the ground or on trees or buildings beyond which there is no other mark , and then you have to match the marks with the appropriate damage to the aircraft .
10 Right you get back in the middle please Bryony .
11 Because usually you go off to a restaurant and if there 's twenty of you you ca n't sit together can you ?
12 The more you pull down on the boom , the more you rail .
13 And so hopefully you came back at the end of the day with quite a bou bag full on your bike , or a box it was , fitted in a carrier , full .
14 It is , in fact , sensible to take your sound recorder along with you whenever you set off on a major shoot .
15 Things happened , one heard stories , but overall you got on with the job .
16 In this sort of book you may well find that the pattern of how-will-he-get-out-of-this is more convenient to use while underneath you get on with the purpose of your story .
17 on well you go up on the left side .
18 This contact may be by post , by telephone or by personal meetings ; the choice will depend very much on how important you are to a magazine and the magazine to you and thus how often you are likely to be working with this particular publication , how physically near you are to each other and indeed how well you get on at a social level .
19 Here you come up against the problem of the modern Pyrenees .
20 uhum , could n't you go up in the other corner .
21 ‘ Look , why do n't you go down to the bar and have a couple of drinks ? ’
22 Why do n't you go down to the optician 's and see about it ? ’
23 Why do n't you go down to the sea and get a blow before tea ? ’
24 " Why do n't you go down to the Lake Field , " he said to Nicandra , " the yearlings might amuse them .
25 ‘ Why did n't you go back to the road and phone a taxi ? ’
26 ‘ If you hate it all so much , why do n't you go back to the bogs ? ’ was his retort .
27 After a traditionally disastrous dress rehearsal the director came into Arthur 's dressing-room , which he shared with Flute the Bellows Mender , and said cheerily , ‘ I tell you what , why do n't you go back to the awful way you used to do it ?
28 ‘ Why do n't you go back to the car ? ’ she said edgily .
29 ‘ Why do n't you go back to the hotel , relax for a while ?
30 Well why ca n't you walk down to the Co-op tomorrow when you 're at dancing and get one yourself .
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