Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] you [modal v] [vb infin] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Mm , I 'm not sure about them you 'll have the headmaster turning up say I recognize everyone here |
2 | Not only am I not prepared to have a semi-detached marriage , but I 'm convinced that if you really cared for me you would have no hesitation about placing my interests first , ’ had been his parting shot as he had left the apartment , slamming the front door loudly behind him . |
3 | To his right was a high sunny window , through which you could see the high green leaves of St James 's Square . |
4 | Now and again , however , we caught glimpses of its Templar past : black Beauce crosses printed on the walls which the passage of time had not faded ; old arrow slits through which you could glimpse the snowy fields beyond ; small gargoyles , some depicting wyverns or dragons , others the faces of long-dead knights . |
5 | Of course , there are many other tasks too for which you 'll find the Steamatic is the perfect answer . |
6 | This can reduce weight but it also constitutes drug-taking , for which you may face a lifetime ban . |
7 | ( 1 ) An important printed heading for a wide topic ( one for which you might draw a pattern diagram ) can be ringed , or outlined by a rectangle of red lines . |
8 | It 's also worth applying for other jobs that appeal and for which you might have a chance . |
9 | If you insist the author will accept some form of payment , for which you can obtain the puzzle editor and create your own new levels . |
10 | ‘ For which you will require a very considerable payment . ’ |
11 | Gold cards , for which you must have an income of around £25,000 a year , are an attractive option because of the |
12 | Our courses offer 6 hours of expert instructions in the basics of the sport at the end of which you will possess the fundamentals and should be competent in moderate winds . |
13 | there does n't seem to be any sense to it really but you can try and make a bit of sense out of some of it not all of it but some of it you can make a bit of sense out of it yes . |
14 | • If you do n't know of anyone you could share a job with , try approaching employment agencies who might be able to match you up with someone . |
15 | Now that it no longer seems so shocking that the town should have grown as it has , the newer half is in fact the more attractive , a fine example of what you might call the Thermal-Imperial style , imposing even in its incongruity , up here in the mountains , with its tall bourgeois hotels framed against the surrounding woods and crags . |
16 | The treatment techniques we describe are not a treatment programme as such : they are examples of what you might see the patient doing , with explanations of what the physiotherapist is trying to achieve , and how the patient should respond . |
17 | When he slides them in front of us you can feel the heat rising . |
18 | Very occasionally he 's given me tinned stuff and pretty naff it is , too : bland and soft , like something you 'd give a kitten . |
19 | It was white now , and behind it you could see the shape . |
20 | Sometimes his Spidergob mates gave him a bit of a skragging on account of it ; not like what you 'd skrag a Mad Dog or a Scarface , if you ever got the chance , ‘ course . |
21 | Every now and again , we run up against what you might call a medieval . |
22 | Most times with me ye 'll find the wind is southerly . ’ |
23 | Choose people you know well and trust and with whom you can share the details of your affairs . |
24 | There are a number of additional options with which you can limit the extent of the search or increase it by ignoring spaces and making the search non case-sensitive . |
25 | And right now there are computing systems in which , with which you can have a conversation , and you can use relatively sloppy English , and , like a person , if the computer does n't know exactly what you mean , because your words are ambiguous , it will offer you several alternative interpretations erm if it has formed some , and then have a dialogue with you about which one you meant . |
26 | I think that with him you must seek the answer to your problem . ’ |
27 | They reckon if you concentrate with him you can do the same |
28 | With him you can expect a lot of gratuitous sex and violence , a trail of corpses and a thrilling roof-top — ’ |
29 | This whole process appears long-winded and complicated but once you are familiar with it you can employ the strategy very quickly . |
30 | At the same time that personal computer technology is moving to centre stage for corporate applications , ‘ it is moving down into what you might call the intelligent television , where you can select any type of movie to see , or shop , or interact with information , ’ Gates said . |