Example sentences of "[pers pn] 're [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It shows that ye 're getting better . ’
2 So all the time you 're thinking that .
3 Oh I can understand what you why you 're thinking that yeah .
4 you 're thinking long-term , yeah I can do this and then when it , a gentleman 's agreement and then it comes to paper , and when that paper 's signed you 're stuck with it
5 You 're thinking more than doing and er wit you know sarcasm they say is the lowest form of wit but actually sarcasm probably is wit .
6 You 're thinking this is all rather comical , are n't you ? ’
7 If you 're thinking this is what this company 's all about , then you ca n't cut your costs , because you ca n't give quality if you reduce costs .
8 No , this is , you 're thinking this is for your front room now your carpet ?
9 And you get silences on the phone and you 're thinking this is going down like a lead balloon .
10 If you 're really rocking and rolling in the art department and you 're allowing some of the experiments to see their way into print , even if they 're not so , they do n't have that slick veneer that people seem to want in the marketing department , progress results and the rawness helps and the thing that makes Jack Stoffagers pages so wonderful is that they are unfiltered , you have the feeling that it 's the printer talking to you , determining something that he 's read , you know , he wants you to read .
11 If you 're involving all those concerned with an evaluation exercise , how can you be objective ?
12 You work forty years of your life you 're made redundant all that time you paid insurance , tax and after twelve months they 've got the gall to take money you paid all your life off your unemployment and throw you on income .
13 because because at least he does throw the objections at you and so at least you 're made aware of what you
14 It 's the brusque boulevards of the imagination ; it 's that untaken , sauntering path between toupeed cottages ; it 's the trompe l'oeil cul-de-sac which bluffs you into the belief that you 're entering some smart avenue .
15 Listen to Nuno Bettencourt , Steve Vai , Clapton — any great player — and you 're hearing great timing , phrasing and articulation , which are all the offspring of a basic understanding of rhythm .
16 Yes , yes , 'cos you 're catching all
17 Just in case you 're catching this bit !
18 And so you 're covered all the way .
19 You see , you 're dividing these people into three different groups .
20 You 're leaving this flat . ’
21 You 're building some shops and a hotel there too .
22 And the new chip is good news if you 're considering one of the slower 20MHz or 25MHz versions , as these have been forced down in price .
23 But I mean i i certainly if you go through the , the early bits erm I mean i i i if you take well okay the , the organization bit to begin with , but then hitting the landlords politically er you know y you 're , you 're checking their accounts , you 're imposing their fines when they 've been a bit naughty , you 're letting contributions erm you 're crowning them and going through the streets , you 're locking them up , you 're banishing some of them , you might be executing some of them but i it 's , it 's only specifically where they 've offended against your , your view of the moral economy , where they , where they 've sort of been naughty in terms of
24 Many existing systems which do n't already heat the hot water can be adapted to do so , but if yours ca n't ( an early warm air system , say ) or if you 're installing one of the few types of system that does n't also heat the hot water ( such as electric storage radiators ) , you will have to choose the hot water system .
25 Hope you 're administering this Robert
26 Why ca n't you say it in an interview then , if you 're asked that question ?
27 Again , you 'll see a good example of that , where closed questions are good in a situation if you want to get a direct answer to somebody who tends to waffle , but again , if you 're asked closed questions and you want to give information , it is harder , it 's easier if you ask somebody an open question and on the film , John Cleese comes up with the starters to an open question , which are the Who , What , Which , Why , Where , When questions .
28 Well I was thinking of things like witchcraft , which would seem a rather a luxury fringe subject , but some of the most fascinating research that 's been done recently in my period of early modern history has been showing how witchcraft erm was the second most important erm crime to come before the courts apart from theft in , in my period , and in exploring why witchcraft had this appeal you 're learning much more about the age .
29 And you 're learning all the time , Pip !
30 ‘ I 'm sure you 've got something to say about why you 're treatin' that poor gel so shameful . ’
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