Example sentences of "[prep] [pers pn] [conj] you [vb mod] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You are n't worried that there might be things about me that you wo n't like ?
2 Be so traumatic for them cos you can actually feel the baby moving
3 it to pieces and , see if he can , of course it 's one of them that you ca n't put back together , like
4 So you only have to learn half of these you do n't have to learn all of them cos you can always switch it round .
5 You 've got a great acting career ahead of you if you could only learn a few more tricks . ’
6 ‘ Or is it that you think so highly of her that you ca n't bring yourself to cast her pearls before swine ?
7 And perhaps our marriage did n't last long , but I had more of him than you 'll ever have .
8 They were in awe of him because you would never have guessed from meeting him how immensely wealthy he was , and because you would never have guessed from knowing how immensely wealthy he was how immensely clever he was as well , and because he was called Freddie when his initials were A. P. J. You 'd catch a glimpse of this tall , stooped figure crossing Trinity Great Court , with one shoulder held slightly higher than the other , and you 'd know you were watching one of the world 's great fortunes walking about , plus , on the same two lanky legs , behind the same untidily dangling forelock , one of the world 's great instruments of serious scholarship .
9 She was very suspicious of him and you can hardly blame her .
10 No fault of mine if you ca n't hurry yourselves . ’
11 you might have heard of it and you might not .
12 You can , you can write it out again afterwards to make sense of it and you can both get together and write it out and sort of do pretty tables .
13 I 'd told myself for weeks that our wedding night would be such a moving experience for both of us that you 'd suddenly realise you were in love with me , and tell me , and everything would end happily ever after . ’
14 ‘ I am afraid it will not be a very happy Christmas for you but you will not lose your job , ’ said the judge .
15 Yes , there was n't a job for you if you could n't carry the barley .
16 Ever since they decided sex is good for you and you ca n't get too much of it , they 've thought food 's bad for you .
17 It 's too hot and it would n't be good for you and you would hardly look very impressive with a great bandage twined round your ankle like the beginnings of a mummifying session . ’
18 A reliable dealer will , of course , have taken all these precautions for you and you can safely rely on his judgement and experience .
19 I 'll have , have to do that later for you because you wo n't be doing it then , this lesson next year , and if your pots do n't go up in the kiln I will be glazing for you , so of course you see the colour and everything we do n't have the time to do that , it 's a shame , well actually they 'll look very smart just with the glaze on , but I 'll try and get that done for you , okay , can you put your hand up if there is
20 And , ah , oh aye , and she says they 're out playing and the s and she says you know what kids are like Jean , and she says like I would n't try even to say to my kids not to go near them because you would n't tell them because they 're only kids and she says they 're like playing in the square and she says like I would David and down here you know when I was coming down
21 If you swear that her little one-off has so turned you against her that you could n't possibly bear to live with her any longer , you 'll get your divorce .
22 Aha , use th bag we might need to put that behind it if you would n't mind please .
23 " You ca n't live with them and you ca n't live without them " may sum up for many public relations people their relationship with the media .
24 Once you get the general idea that programs and data files can be made to interact , you can have fun with them and you can also be more productive ( which is the excuse to use if your boss finds you doing this ) .
25 She stopped abruptly by the gate to the Albion 's gardens , whirled on him , snapping her parasol shut again : ‘ Because I was annoyed with you that you could even think such a thing .
26 But it was nothing to do with you and you must n't reproach yourself .
27 But if you can raise that profile which I talk about , the of the ethics of of your trade , your profession and become , in effect , a pressure group , a pressure group for the public good , while we may not always agree with you , and indeed we 're going to say that we do n't agree with you and you must n't be afraid of that but we would rather hear from you , you 're the men and women at the sharp end , I hesitate to say ‘ experts ’ because ‘ expert ’ is a , a rather over-used word but we 'd much rather hear from you , at the sharp end , than the part-time politicians who , by the very nature of , of their role , and however well-meaning they may be , they have other priorities .
28 You try to come to terms with it but you ca n't .
29 She always looks very warm — she sort of sinks into it so you can just spot the top of her hat .
30 You can look right into it and you can actually find out the behaviour of it fully .
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