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

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1 ‘ I 'd have had it in properly for you if you had n't .
2 It 's almost painful to tell kids who have gone to see The Graduate eight times that once was enough for you because you 've already seen it eighty times with Charles Ray and Robert Harron and Richard Barthlemess and Richard Cromwell and Charles Farrell …
3 In such an organization you feel hemmed in by people who can refuse you permission to do something or who are only waiting to jump all over you if you appear to be taking the initiative , or achieving something which even they may recognize as being highly desirable , in ‘ the wrong way ’ .
4 People can think as badly of you as you do of yourself .
5 Now , without moving your feet from where they are , let the trolley slowly roll away from you until you feel it start to go out of control — then pull it back .
6 Fast cars do n't pull away from you if you handle them badly .
7 Now would you feel if people ran away from you when you did n't mean to hurt them ? ’
8 Insensitive handling of cash-flow by Accounts might just be the last straw to turn a key person away from you when you need him or her the most .
9 ‘ Oh , I know more about you than you think . ’
10 You 're different , you 're dynamic , let it come across a bit more about you and you know , what a good team you are and you 've cracked it .
11 What was life like for you before you had your cottage here ?
12 A lot of people like it because basically th er when you look after a police dog it becomes your pet as well , you take it home with you and you take it to work with you , and the u you 'll have a police dog for sort of like its working life of seven to eight years , so basically you 're gon na have him for seven to eight years and he becomes a fa like a family pet .
13 But I think probably the most disturbing was some of the poor people in , in psychiatry erm and er that was very hard work because you seemed to take the problems home with you and you kept thinking about some of the conditions that people had .
14 Parents please help yourselves , and use them to help your children — take a copy home with you if you wish .
15 Parents please help yourselves , and use them to help your children — take a copy home with you if you wish .
16 Parents please help yourselves , and use them to help your children — take a copy home with you if you wish .
17 Parents please help yourselves , and use them to help your children — take a copy home with you if you wish .
18 ‘ There 's a lot more in you that you do n't know about — yet , ’ he said gently .
19 Well at times I feel like erm you 're dealing with things that are just totally beyond you and you feel as if you 're sinking and feel totally helpless .
20 At times it comes home to you and you sit and have a weep .
21 ‘ It 's probably just as well for you that you did n't , ’ he returned curtly .
22 ‘ No , but if you 'll give me your spare keys I can be waiting here for you when you get back .
23 It has to be said that this is a massive walk , particularly for you if you do n't know Ted , and you could certainly fill a day with only these two peaks .
24 Ahead of you as you walk along the length of the piazza is the Casa del Manzoni , Manzoni 's house , a fine nineteenth century building in which the writer lived from 1813 until his death on 22 May 1873 .
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