Example sentences of "you would [verb] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 You 'd feel just like going up to London wont you ?
2 ‘ Surely you 'd feel much safer with me locked behind bars ? ’
3 ‘ If you only had twelve of us instead of thirty-two you 'd manage much better . ’
4 And I had a se , you know , I mean you you were aware that you were in a coach and you 'd you 'd wake up occasionally and realise you we , but by enlarge I had eight hours sleep !
5 And then you 'd stop on afterwards to er nurse them back to health again .
6 You 'd end up dead anyway , but at least you would n't end up dead and out of breath as well .
7 And then you 'd start all over again !
8 and then you 'd start all over again !
9 But what could be really annoying about Con was that you 'd start off together , a couple of sailors on shore-leave , and at the end of your binge , you 'd be left feeling embarrassed at having gone too far .
10 On a different point , you 'd do well not to dismiss the guitarists of the sixties and seventies quite so readily .
11 I think you 'd do very well .
12 But I think er with a big family like mother had got , she used to like her divi day erm for erm you know , well say save up , well it used to come round about May and you 'd think well just , you know just in time for the summer shoes or something you know .
13 You 'd think more so than a big Tesco 's because you would n't think lots of people
14 Yeah I was gon na say you 'd think that early
15 So the first thing you 'd expect on just by the false but enormously appealing principle that the world is simple and elegant , is there is just one level of structure there .
16 You 'd go down very well on the Moon , Alice .
17 It was Joanne said you 'd go down there , so you said alright .
18 And you 'd say , right , and you 'd go the , after the baby was born you , you 'd go back again to what we call the nur nursing , nursing up and you 'd want the bowl again for the baby and you 'd say wh where 's the bowl and they 'd say , oh well I think it 's downstairs , we used it yesterday to make a pudding in .
19 If you go twice as fast as something else , and you started out at the same instant from the same spot , you 'd go twice as far — which is what you found .
20 When you did n't speak to me straightaway I thought you 'd go off again without a word to me . ’
21 You 're beautiful to look at , you 're full of charm and innocence , and when you smile — I wish you 'd smile more often — it 's like a bright ray of sunshine on a dark day .
22 In those days they did n't use mileometers , what they did was they took any particular route number and the number of journeys they did , because in those days a bus kept on a route which applied , say between Witton and Rushmere Heath all day , did n't run around like they do nowadays and erm when the schedules were prepared , each bus had got a route number or was placed on a route number , say one Witton , two Witton , three Witton and a copy of its schedule was recorded on another sheet and the mileage , having known what the mileage was and we 'd used to obtain that from the Borough Surveyor 's Department , er I think it was about nine point one four miles a return trip Witton and Rushmere Heath , er you 'd work out how many journeys they did there and say well that bus was due to run a hundred and twenty six miles during the day .
23 Well you 'd need about nearly round round about a million goes .
24 I thought we 're gon na so we came out of Paul 's place , behind Belmont Parade , up past the ponds there and that 's and I 'm knackered , I 'm going up river , had no you start at the bottom of Belmont Parade , up those ponds up to the traffic lights where you change buses , that 's all up hill and it 's slow , and you 've just started and you 're not warm and it 's like running out of here , running up that hill there , now you could run up that hill if you got , if you had sort of round a couple of times round nice , no one so more ready to go , you 'd run up there , you come out of here , run down here , not warm , feel you get , well I come out of there and , and you get , you go up past that set of traffic lights , you go up and you 're still struggling past The Bull , that 's still up hill , you get to the , just round that bend and it starts dropping down , and it 's a gradual drop down , below the roundabout and the next roundabout 's pretty level there , not too bad a roundabout , right the way across to Scades Hill , went down Scades Hill , right the way down to Alton , bottom of Alton high street , came out by the toilets at White Hart to High Street , up to house .
25 Then you 'd say well here 's our pie we 're going to share it out between ten people tonight .
26 And , and you 'd , I 'd , you 'd say how long would we be and well we 'd come to er , you know , an agr
27 You 'd have well basically timesed it by three .
28 You 'd recognize this if you are a driver and especially a driver who maybe has the opportunity of travelling long distance , now years ago when I was younger and perhaps some of you in the audience when you were younger , you could go from here to the South of England with no trouble , without a break and you 'd head on down the motorway and you , you 'd be alert and alive and er ready to meet up with all sorts of emergencies and you 'd drive quite well all the way down , non stop down the South of England , but if you 're like me now , when I get to Stafford on the motorway you 're beginning to feel as if you 've had enough and it 's difficult to try and keep your concentration as you used to years ago , and that 's how it can be in the truth sometimes , when we 've been with it a long time that , we grow older not only physically , but spiritually too we become very experienced in the truth and we become very sort of fat spiritually , we can live off of that fat ca n't we ?
29 the water got up to the second step from the top , but , when , instead of turning right into my road if you 'd keep straight on
30 The odd thing is that the earliest models — unstreamlined and primitive ( thermostats were n't available until the 20s ) — seem just the thing you 'd see in today 's trendy kitchen .
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