Example sentences of "you 've get a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 James you 've got a licence to go on the air have n't you ?
2 No , you 've got a lounge and dining area .
3 but you , you ca n't make that public and you are still worried that it can go too far to the left and therefore you , you , you 've got a range of , of erm quite moderate proposals which come in which , i if they were implemented , would restrain and would maintain the su the support of the ninety percent , th that you are still only seeking to antagonize really those , those landlords who are not going to be prepared to come back within the system .
4 You 've got a sense of humour . ’
5 Well if you 've got a cross-section of
6 Christine , you 've got a quarter of an hour and then you go out on the table , cos that dinner is going anywhere
7 Erm say you 've got a stone on top a cliff .
8 J , A , K , O , B. You 've got a cheque for me for £799 . ’
9 You may have a list of directories as well , off the root directory , and then you 've got a directory called One Two Three One Two Three programs in .
10 Then you 've got a continuation shot .
11 Now , are you sure you 've got a change of socks ? ’
12 You 've got a cold , ’ Lady Grubb said accusingly to her son .
13 That 's right , it 's a similar to hat you get if you go flying when you 've got a cold .
14 and Dave said , and there you are , that 's why you 've got a cold .
15 ‘ Her first thought was : ‘ You 've got a cat — have n't you heard of toxoplasmosis ?
16 You only buy cat food if you 've got a cat .
17 you then looks like you 've got a nest on your head
18 You 've got a recording the sound again ?
19 You 've got a kitchen diner .
20 If you 've got a kitchen , it defeats the object , really , does n't it ?
21 If you 've got a kitchen upstairs , it defeats the object of you 're having a fridge
22 You 've got a return on expenditure for your function of eight point nine percent .
23 I think you 've got a responsibility to yourself , but then maybe I 'm a hypocrite .
24 I would n't say it was exactly narrow-minded , but you 've got a position , you 're given a position to hold and you get it rammed down you that ‘ I am now an applied scientist ’ .
25 Because that implies that this kind of thing then spreads to other areas of life , I mean it , after all the revolution of seventeen ninety eight did n't have anything to do with erm industrial relations as such , I mean it was er it was really about the monarchy , the state and er people starving and all that stuff , but the this introduces the interesting idea that once you 've got a kind of pattern in the culture to something , it can then reappear in other areas .
26 Like y'know we we 've mentioned organisational structure I think in the very first lecture er that idea , the idea that you 've got a kind of box at the top labelled president and you 've got two boxes underneath labelled vice president and you 've got y'know one box goes off to sales manager y'know the sort of thing I mean , okay ?
27 Now erm oh you 've got a pen .
28 ‘ If you 've got a pen I 'll read the directions as they gave them to the family . ’
29 Oh and you 've got a pen too !
30 In the sense that , in a way going on from what I was saying on the face of it south China ought to be the area where land reform will be easiest to achieve in the sense that here you 've got a society which is landlord dominated , heavily landlord dominated and therefore w where one would expect that the antagonism , antagonisms between landlords and tenants would be at their greatest .
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