Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] you [modal v] [vb infin] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Try smaller local companies who might benefit from some publicity or for whom you could attract extra business or perhaps create an enduring and prestigious work of art .
2 ‘ Simon reckoned that after Sintra if he spoke about me you 'd get tense — though you did n't realise he noticed .
3 ( A supplementary pension payable under the Supplementary Benefits scheme is not taxable , nor are voluntary payments made to her by you or other relatives , for which you can claim tax-free allowance .
4 Conveniently one of them you could call long-term , one medium-term , and one short-term .
5 At the end of it you should feel refreshed .
6 In practice , there are no limits as to the pictures a magazine can publish of a naked woman ( ‘ We would start to take an interest if the pictures were of what you might term kinky sex — bondage and so on , ’ says the Scotland Yard officer ) ; yet only the mildest pictures of naked men get into high-street newsagents .
7 Erm but not everybody 's quite so erm y'know not everybody gets on with everybody and um this kind of what you might call personal chemistry , to lapse for a moment into pharmacological determinism er maybe helps um maybe helps a bit .
8 In Southend , where 3,000 of the 50,000 adult males are reckoned to be Masons , it went into the case of what you might call Preferential Allocation of Council Property , and the battle of one councillor , Christopher Hudson , to break the grip of the men on the Square : ‘ We ca n't have a secret society operating within the framework of a democracy , ’ he said .
9 How any reparation could be made , and talking about reparation , this business over absent fathers , er , has just killed that idea of us getting more and more in that kind of way , but I 'm sure there are many people , and I 'm not thinking about those who have been , committed an act of violence , and said , well they might do it again , but say , I 'm pretty sure people who have been committed in effect of what you could call civil crimes , that is putting their hand in the drawer , should never be in prison .
10 ‘ I ca n't say I know any of what you 'd call good people . ’
11 But what catches the eye , while lane-changing to avoid the gaudily clad in day-glo outfits , is the ease with which you can buy boron-graphite shafts at just 13 dollars a go .
12 To survive and succeed as a student , you 'll need to develop your own pattern of regular activity , within which you can feel secure and become an effective student , leaving yourself sufficient freedom to be spontaneous , to be yourself .
13 £50000 does not go very far in TV , except on one or two small regional stations ; it is quite difficult , as the cigarette companies find , to spend £1 million plus on a brand without using TV at all : if you only have a few hundred pounds to spend there are few press media in which you can consider full pages or even moderately large sizes .
14 These include a heated swimming pool , sauna and solarium , crazy golf , Exmoor club in which you can enjoy free entertainment , a shop and ‘ Country Kitchen ’ restaurant , launderette , good bar food and take away meals .
15 At the end of each evening there will a special prize draw in which you can win Good Food Club annual memberships , cheeseboards , Zanussi cool bags and storage containers and Tupperware cheese graters .
16 There is an integral garage from which you can gain direct access to the cellar .
17 In it you 'll find punky tinges and folky tinges plus power pop surges .
18 In it you will find various gifts including some that are suitable for First Holy Communion .
19 in , in what you might call hot water
20 In what you might call quiet years .
21 You take Shallot 's advice on this : the power of witchcraft lies in what you can make other people think .
22 Schools , polytechnics and universities all have magazines and newspapers on which you may gain actual experience while still a student .
23 This is something on which you will need legal advice , from a lawyer familiar with the law in that country .
24 It 's all nonsense , paying for what you can get free . ’
25 I 'm quite keen to make a distinction between what you might call victimless crimes and crimes with victims , and that it is , it seems to me , we want to move away from an older pattern in which the university had its ideas of how people should behave and tried to make them conform to those ideas , towards a much more complaint activated system of response , so that it 's the kind of behaviour find objectionable that the authorities may get drawn into looking at .
26 Early in the Autumn Term there is a reception at which you can meet current staff and students .
27 In every question needing assessment a standard or scale of reference is required by which you can measure relative success , failure or achievement .
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