Example sentences of "you [verb] in the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 . When you print from the cuts that you make in the plate it 's called intaglio printing .
2 I am also the boy who you met in the jungle .
3 ‘ When I got home on the evening that it was announced Terry Venables had taken out an injunction , one of my children was very nervous and said ‘ Why do n't you throw in the towel ?
4 no , it 's too cold for you to go in the garage , do n't want to get pneumonia do ya ?
5 CATHERINE I 'd be more pleased if I knew how you got in the door .
6 It 's that dreadful stuff you got in the bazaars . ’
7 How many people have you got in the council in your office ?
8 That grey one you got in the sale . ’
9 you got in the cellar ?
10 The illuminated versions can be handy if sited near the keyhole — they will probably give you just enough light to stop you fumbling in the dark with your key .
11 ‘ If you play lots of games you lose in the end , ’ warns Gaming Board secretary Tom Kavanagh .
12 So I would like to move on to ask a few questions about er where you lived in the past .
13 To qualify as a model foster parent you had to be at the wealthier level of the middle class , with an already established family ; it helped if you lived in the country ( away from urban enticements ) , spoke a little German , and could tolerate moody children who suffered bouts of depression and were inclined to long silences .
14 You lived in the country , of course . ’
15 So how do you you know , you lived in the flats for fifteen years .
16 Was that when when you lived in the republic of Ireland ?
17 When you lived in the republic of Ireland .
18 So did you t did you like it in Ireland , I mean , did did you like it when you lived in the Republic of Ireland or did Did you like living there ?
19 ‘ If you mean in the raft , you may not , ’ Silas drawled .
20 Oh you you mean in the room ?
21 If you eat in the staff restaurant at lunch-time , take your customers there too .
22 The trouble is , you see , if Christopher 's doing what he wants to do , you 're doing what you all want to do and then both both of you crash in the middle it 's nobody 's fault particularly is it ?
23 ‘ Tell me , Geoffrey , why did you stay in the Tower ? ’
24 Let me be buried in lead at Claydon next to where your father proposes to lie himself , and let no stranger wind me , nor do not let me be stripped , but put a clean smock on me , and let my face be hid and do you stay in the room and see me wound and laid in the first coffin , which must be of wood if I do not die of any infectious disease , else I am so far from desiring it that I forbid you to come near me .
25 At first puzzled , then anxious , then furious with disbelief , you sit in the driveway with the engine running ; you sit there for weeks , months , for years , waiting for the doors to open .
26 I 'd better get out of these togs — I also suggest you sit in the rear of the car before we arrive at Tavey Grange . ’
27 Of course , you 'll be hooked from the moment you sit in the driving seat , but then there 's a problem .
28 as you sit in the grass ,
29 ‘ There are times , ’ Powell admitted wearily , ‘ when you sit in the ambulance and think to yourself ‘ is this all worth it ? ’ ‘
30 reminded of mistakes you made in the past — the sight/presence of someone you wronged in the past .
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