Example sentences of "you 'd [vb pp] a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ You look as if you 'd seen a ghost , ’ was her greeting . |
2 | If you 'd done a P . |
3 | I thought you 'd done a runner and run away |
4 | Cos nowadays if you if you did something like that folk would say you 'd gone a bit funny . |
5 | I thought you 'd gone a bit shitty . |
6 | ‘ Not a thing , other than that you 'd expressed a wish to go there , and I wanted to see you . ’ |
7 | And , because you 'd made a loss , you could , out of your taxed pension , introduce a couple of hundred pounds into the business as a capital in introduction , to keep the business running , and it would n't affect the profit figures at all . |
8 | Did you feel that you 'd completed a phase ? |
9 | Did you feel that you 'd completed a phase ? |
10 | I said so I 've been to a local firm and he said well if you 'd wanted a job we could 've found you one , so I went to the Co-op and I went in the credit , working in the Co-op credit and er went from there to . |
11 | Okay so you 'd had a bit of a break that 's good . |
12 | ‘ For dropping you in at the deep end , before you 'd had a chance to get your bearings … ’ |
13 | ‘ I knew you 'd had a son , but I did n't realise he was in the house , ’ Vitor said . |
14 | When you had the nightmare , I assumed it was because you 'd had a lot of men without ever reaching any kind of genuine ecstasy with them . ’ |
15 | It was n't until they were er sort of six or seven years old that er you 'd , you 'd took a part time job . |
16 | But then avowed with a great deal of feeling , ‘ I sorely needed somebody 's help when , with daylight I returned to that hotel and discovered you 'd taken a train back to Mariánské Láznë ! ’ |
17 | You 'd used a shield in training . |
18 | Then someone told him you 'd spent a night together on your way back from Charwelton . ’ |
19 | another sort of six marks or maybe eight marks for the the end bit of the question , erm you 'd spent a bit of time on this . |
20 | ‘ You would forget the ten thousand , and I would n't tell the law that you 'd left a stiff behind the Windsor . ’ |
21 | I thought you were gon na tell me you 'd won a fortune ! |
22 | , I thought you 'd started a book to put those , all these paper cuttings ? |
23 | I did n't know you 'd found a successor to Death-House Donald . " |
24 | ‘ If you 'd brought a brush and shovel with you , you could have taken it home , ’ he said , slapping his clipboard against a thigh . |
25 | Blimey , no , it was a luxury if you 'd got a washer then . |
26 | ‘ I did n't know you 'd got a daughter . ’ |
27 | I thought you 'd got a bit carried away when you were drawing them . ’ |
28 | You 'd got a bit more margin , you see . |
29 | ‘ When I did see him , he said ‘ I thought you 'd got a cold ? ’ |
30 | Oh , you were lucky if you 'd got a wash-house attached to your house , in those days . |