Example sentences of "you [vb past] to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ No , Christy , ’ says Perry , ‘ and why ai n't ye got to bed ?
2 As we togged up and down the Seefeld baby slopes learning how to sno-plough and how to get up when you failed to sno-plough , it became apparent that this was , with or without ganglion , perhaps not going to be Jack 's Number One sport .
3 Same at bedtime before you got to bed .
4 Did you got to school in ?
5 But er you got to Paris , you got an address in Paris , they gave you a bed , couple of meals
6 Well how , you you got to London did you ?
7 That sat as good as gold till you got to Colin 's did n't he ?
8 And then when you got to Slane
9 ah , what , you got to Holly Cottage first ?
10 Southwell Southwell faces Mansfield which rather gets us in the stick you see because we have to come here for Benefit Office interviews and things like that but you got to Mansfield
11 " That was a fine offering you made to Krander and Sampanena , " he remarked .
12 So were you born here moved to Malton , moved back here and then moved to Malton or you were here and they you moved to Malton when she lived there ?
13 No wonder you moved to Pickering .
14 You moved to Sering Street , just off Bond St , at the height recession .
15 The Major said , ‘ You mentioned to Harrison you had someone investigate into Kinsella 's past .
16 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 ?
17 You , you kept them and you tried to sort of let people have them who you felt deserved them you know most .
18 In your otherwise excellent article you referred to Bob 's evasion of ‘ the sad dank dustbin of memory ’ .
19 ‘ Apparently you referred to Mr Fairchild in these terms , ’ said Bunny , and dipping a brush in a tin of brown paint he scrawled the word ‘ cunt ’ on a piece of sugar paper tacked to the work top .
20 This kind of art 's often referred to as minimal art , which helps , you know , like most stables there 's a quite way of referring to stuff , and indeed very often this kind of art relates to very simple forms , which just one colour , or perhaps no colour if it 's a piece of wood for instance , or a large canvass covered with just one colour , a monochrome canvas — you referred to monochromes earlier .
21 You drove to Penzance , leaving home at about seven-thirty , you went to the film and started to drive back , but your van broke down at Badger 's Cross and after trying to start it and sheltering for some time , you walked home , arriving at about half-past two . ’
22 You drove to Ashington in it .
23 ‘ It was before you came to England , I suppose ? ’
24 His response to the captain 's surprised question , 'so you came to Czechoslovakia to go to the football match , Professor ? " ( p. 71 ) is , initially , to violate the maxim of quality ( " Certainly not " ) and then to imply that this is not entirely the case by violating the maxims of quantity and relevance when he provides three excuses for not attending all the sessions of the Colloquium instead of admitting the truth .
25 When you came to door I was pulling , pulling the head
26 ‘ And you put food in , against the King 's orders , before ever you came to Nicosia ?
27 But damn it to hell , I 've never been able to see clearly or think straight where you 're concerned — certainly not since you came to Taipei , and maybe not even six years ago either .
28 ‘ The fact that you came to Moila and took that godforsaken cottage — and that your brother agreed to come with you , ’ said Neil cheerfully .
29 ‘ But when you came to lunch I knew that you would be his soulmate , that the two of you shared an affinity . ’
30 Was this a new area for you when you came to Suffolk because we have the docks close by , chemicals coming in there and at Felixstowe ,
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