Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [conj] you [verb] it " in BNC.

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1 In those days we had to use an oil wool , which was all right after you washed it , if somewhat coarse .
2 I thought I 'd give you that opportunity cos it is a little ARC publication , it 's one that we er So so if you want it .
3 Naturally not if you cook it with Mrs Marshall 's Coralline pepper , drowned in pints of anchovy sauce .
4 So far as you see it
5 I will quote you from long ago if you doubt it : ‘ Life holds no greater sadness than to be blind in Granada . ’
6 Lastly , which is something we all reach eventually , hopefully , is what we call unconscious competence , when you know how to do something so well that you do it un without thinking , it 's like driving .
7 It used to have a handle come right over when you lifted it up .
8 ‘ It is not enough and you know it ! ’
9 Yeah , sounds just like just like when you said it in n it ?
10 It also depends on the sun — a south-facing window will add more heat than it loses , winter or summer , though not always when you want it .
11 I mean I 've even though about if I if I tell you this and you think that 's it 's going to put you you just even if you pass it on to somebody what I 'm telling you pass it on , but just and I 'll try and get the dental treatment where I can get the dental treatment .
12 keep that hand ready otherwise you 'll discover that it 's not there when you want it , use it , OK
13 So you do a little circly and you have it full Oh that 's clever in n it !
14 It stays longer where you need it to stay — in the stomach — and moves more swiftly where you need it to move more swiftly , through the intestine and bowel .
15 You know I 'm , in some ways you know I 'm so glad I 've never had like well before you know it used to bother me that I 'd never had a long-term relationship and that
16 But it 's always there when you need it .
17 If you think about it , you slide it into where the joint would be along the line of the femur bone , you bend the knee up , and you pull it right up and you rotate it
18 You could also erm , start to recognize the benefit of the rural sector , and one reason why they were discriminating , L D Cs tended to want to ignore that and sort of shun it , because it 's not sort of a glamorous image they were trying to hope for in the urban sector , and , so , if they did help them , say give them units , like the repair men , units to work in , and they put them in really totally crappy accommodation , and up not where you need it , and not where people pass by with their motors and things , they , they 'd put them somewhere up on a hill , overlooking a city , so erm , to encourage the informal sector by erm , sort of on a par with the formal sector because erm , their inter- reacting , inter-relating now , like they 're providing cheap inputs for the formal industries and , and the formal industries are pro providing clientele all for the informal sector , and so it 's all inter-linked and , and it 's there now .
19 I do think it 's lightened this room up though when you think it gone
20 Could I firstly start by thanking those delegates who after Congress yesterday have expressed support about the two rule changes that we lost and to give some encouragement to new delegates here that even if you get up here and you lose it , there 's some one hell of a lot of support out there on the floor .
21 Then , like hope , energy or money , the road runs out just when you need it .
22 There will , however , always be those who tend to see the negative side and may well suggest you ‘ do n't lose weight too quickly or you 'll look old ’ or ‘ you 'll only put it back on twice as fast if you lose it quickly ’ .
23 Toiling up the slope from Falmer railway station , you had the Kafkaesque sensation of walking into an endlessly deep stage set where apparently three-dimensional objects turned out to be painted flats , and reality receded as fast as you pursued it .
24 ‘ We 'll get inside somehow and we 'll find the — the person who was captured and be out again before you know it ! ’
25 What seems to happen there is the bird that 's deserted has to stay with the existing family because if he or she erm deserts , those chicks will , will , will die , so er it 's what is sometimes called the Concorde fallacy that if you put a lot of resources into something , you 've got ta see it through , because if you pull out just before the end you can lose everything , whereas i if , if you stay on even if you know it 's a failure , erm at least you may get something out of it , so the , in that case wi with monogamous birds the parent that 's deserted the one that 's left may have to stay , because if they desert then they can have no reproductive success whatsoever whereas at least if they stay they get something .
26 Well perhaps if you bought it direct yourself , you 'd perhaps get fourpence on it .
27 Well especially if you put it in your high interest .
28 Then you see an express train apparently coming out through the embankment while a gigantic head capped with flowers revolves high above and you realise it will be an amazing day .
29 Well because you 'd have to pay even more if you did it privately .
30 Well it wo n't even if you inject it because , how
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