Example sentences of "you [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Collect four coupons and each set of coupons allows you to claim up to four tickets and it was a pound a ticket was n't it ?
2 You qualify out of that as an acting corporal , then you 're used by other classes ; for example , as a helper or decoy in staged attacks .
3 you change back to normal , you get one of those
4 If you placed up to that amount in your PEP , the guarantee was that your return after the end of that tax year would be free of income tax and capital gains tax .
5 I was , I was n't meaning you to go up in single numbers I was meaning , go up in hundreds .
6 They tell you to go on with artificial respiration for ever , for long after you 've given up hope .
7 I need you to go back to that two-dimensional universe again .
8 ‘ I do n't want you to go back to that flat for any reason at all , ’ Julius instructed her in clipped tones .
9 Well the first question I want to ask you is how do you feel you got on in those presentations .
10 ‘ Well at least you got through at last , ’ said Carrington .
11 You got through to that man , then ?
12 I , standing on my tiptoes I could n't see out the window to , to look out to the stage erm , and there was a huge step up , it was about that , which was great for people 's bad backs and if you got up on that , erm then you sat on top of a very high cocktail chair , in fact one of our people had to kneel on top of the high cocktail chair , to look , to see down , over the window , down to the stage and they did n't give us a sound feed which would sound familiar
13 I trust you , you 're not a fool , you know what could happen if you got up to some mischief out there , ’ and her fingers described general obloquy with a sweeping gesture of abolition , ‘ and then you 'll never get a husband either .
14 I hear you got up at one .
15 It was really a good play , ha , and it was done so well , and you were so close to it as well , you got in for two pounds , best thing I 've ever seen .
16 Just but , once you as you long as you got in before twelve o'clock
17 Mormon 's orchard four , that 's all you got out of that lot .
18 ‘ Then you got out in good time .
19 And you always worked by time in stables , you 'd get out at say , you went at six o'clock , you got out till seven and were out two hours , that 's seven , eight , nine .
20 for a site and the carrot is actually being able to apply to designation whether you lived up to that .
21 Erm , well , I assume you mean out of recent Leeds United players ( you ca n't seriously be comparing him with the real greats of football can you ? ) . he could certainly hit it , and sometimes goal-bound ( and quite often into the wall or behind for a goal kick ) .
22 you mean out of these ?
23 We pay fifteen percent extra on to all all the business you bring in above that figure .
24 But staying out at night cost money if you did the right things : coffee bars and a movie or a disco , but if you rode round in borrowed cars it was an okay way of killing time .
25 You trot down like this .
26 ‘ For the sake of her memory I would n't have hesitated to bring you crashing down from that pedestal if I 'd discovered anything damning about you . ’
27 Can you cash in on unwanted space or possessions ?
28 Other utilities allow you to support up to four other users on the same system , each of which has a different key , allowing different levels of access to the system .
29 But then you come to the problem , erm , because for ninety four five , erm , the formula suggests that we would need less staff , that might seem a bit odd but the , the reason is that if you do indeed bring your target times down , then the amount of work which your passing over into the next year is er considerably less , erm than the amount of work which you passed over into this year ,
30 Can you zoom in on that window then ?
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