Example sentences of "all [adv] for you " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The trouble is , ’ she said , ‘ that you are inevitably in the position of people being able to say , ‘ It 's all right for you , you do n't have to live next door to those punks and weirdos . ’
2 ‘ It 's all right for you is n't it !
3 Or is it all right for you to keep your own kids , but the likes of us , ordinary people , who 've got to give up — ’
4 All right for you .
5 All right for you with Mrs Ash next door , you do n't have to worry .
6 It is quite all right for you to get up and go along to the bathroom , but you should put on your stockings and your knickers .
7 ‘ Oh , 't is all right for you to be superior … ’
8 She now poked her face towards him , for her words had not been a statement but a direct question , one with a touch of bitterness , and when he did n't answer she went on , ‘ It was all right for you .
9 It 's all right for you .
10 ‘ It 's all right for you , ’ said Dolly , ‘ you ai n't never been a poor orphan girl . ’
11 " I done it all right for you ? "
12 ‘ It 's all right for you .
13 ‘ That 's all right for you to say , since you 've always worked in passionless chemical engineering . ’
14 ‘ It 's all right for you .
15 Bread and marmalade all right for you , James ? "
16 It 's all right for you , reading this in comfort .
17 ‘ It 's all right for you to criticise , is n't it .
18 ‘ It was all right for you .
19 Is that all right for you ? ’
20 It 's all right for you , he tells me , with your middle class accent and your American passport .
21 Is Thursday night , say 7.30 , all right for you ? ’
22 ‘ It 's all right for you , ’ Andy says .
23 Has everything been all right for you and my ma , down at the cottage ? ’
24 ‘ It 's all right for you .
25 ‘ It 's all right for you , ’ he said .
26 [ All right for you , Davey ? ]
27 ‘ Is it all right for you to say sixty-fifth floor ? ’
28 ‘ That is all right for you , ’ said Andrus with an unexpected flash of his old spirit , ‘ but what about me ?
29 ‘ It 's all right for you .
30 In the present situation , the officers find themselves in a very difficult position , I can not imagine an officer saying no to a member and this is what has happened if we run out of money , then the very thing that we are seeking to do , in other words to implement the democratic process to allow people to come to meetings and speak will go by the way , and I can remember some time ago when I was a new member on here saying I would be prepared to attend property sub-committee briefings as a deputy and not be paid and I was very smartly brought up by a friend in the labour group who said that 's all right for you , you can afford it , but it 's not alright for some of us 'cause we can't. and the difficulty is if we run out of money and we either have to stop the allowances or we have to slash the allowances , yeah , knows who it was , we have to slash the allowances , then legitimately people will be able to say that the democratic process is being stifled because they are not going to be allowed to go to meetings , and therefore , I think that situations whereby a member attends to speak to a , an item , a specific item and then stays on for a double length meetings and claims double length allowances that sort of thing has got to be stopped , and also members attending just to nod approval at something that has happened that they 've been associated with , that should stop , if they want to come they should come at their own expense .
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