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

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1 Rent a nice little flat somewhere where you know exactly what your outgoings are — where you know you 're not responsible for anything .
2 Therefore if you 've got a relationship with somebody and all you seem to constantly to be doing is constantly arguing and it 's either I win or you win you 're never gon na get out of that unless other time .
3 Or you know you 're in a meeting and the chairman what 's your opinion John on this where you what do you think about this ?
4 If you are the subject of aggressive or abusive behaviour , or you feel you are being treated unfairly , you should remain calm and not respond to provocation .
5 Practise writing even although you think you 're rotten at it .
6 A few years ago they were making some of the best pop singles you could play on a jukebox : ‘ Something About You ’ , ‘ Leaving Me Now ’ , ‘ Lessons In Love ’ , all the kind of thing that you felt you were going to be sick of hearing before long but which still sounded good after the thousandth time .
7 that , that was to do , behind Algate that you said you were doing
8 You once let out the fact that you wished you were free of the burdens your family placed on you .
9 The blessing of a pattern like this , where the motif alternates between dark and light , is that you know you are using equal amounts of each shade .
10 Anybody that works in a lesson that you doss about in , that you know you 're going to doss about in , that 's it , you get called ‘ ponce ’ and everything . ’
11 erm and also checking with them that you know you 're not going one way and no no , they 'd want you to do something else ,
12 He always stayed calm , but he had a knack of turning things around so that you thought you were getting your own way when in fact you 'd just agreed with him .
13 He might well have settled to be a good chief for the clan that you say you 're so concerned for , Eachuinn Maclean .
14 Perhaps it seems politic to you to end our affair now that you realise you 're suspected — found out — whereas it did n't seem to matter while the evidence of your passion in bed could lull me into accepting that there was no one else .
15 Feelings of guilt are really about a sense of unentitlement ; in thinking that your desires and feelings are wrong or ‘ silly ’ you are also saying that you feel you are wrong or silly , and not entitled to be taken seriously , or helped .
16 Since the final Munro has been with you all the way along , it 's only here that you feel you are now finally making your way towards it and the conclusion of the walk .
17 If you are not eligible to be put in if you do n't have a motor car then you 're discounting an enormous number of people who may have motorcycles or motor caravans or , you know , something which is perfectly valid but it invalidates the information that you think you are getting out of the file because you only put in certain perfectly reasonable , groups of er of things and i in , in , in Boots there 's a , there 's a er there 's a a wonderful expression or actually is , is the one I 'm particularly thinking about , you know we , we sell shall we say a million bottles of aspirin a year , it is in fact considerably more than that , and that is perfectly reasonable and valid and mm but in the definition of that we obviously only included what Boots the Chemists sold because that 's all the people who
18 You do n't go to the opera primarily to hear the music , you go to be bundled together with people similar to yourself , or people that you think you 're like .
19 The clutch is so stiff that you think you 're pushing against the bulkhead until it gives .
20 You are really much better than you think you are . ’
21 So what if you go berserk and eat an ounce more lettuce than you think you are eating !
22 ‘ Or maybe you 're just a better policeman than you think you are , ’ said Rohmer .
23 ‘ Take care , Claudia ; you 're more vulnerable than you think you are , and he sounds a very determined man . ’
24 They have no choice at all , and we are in a most dreadful situation and government policy only has one choice and that 's you buy , and if you ca n't afford to buy , and at the moment only thirty five per cent of families in Oxford can afford to buy on the current wage levels and the current house prices , the other sixty five per cent have no choice whatsoever , so you know you 're talking nonsense to say we want consumer choice in housing .
25 And erm so you see you 're , you 're throwing money to get money which is , which is a bit stupid .
26 There was a chapter in it titled ‘ So You Think You 're Chekhov ’ .
27 ( ’ So You Think You 're Chekhov . ’ )
28 And so you think you 're working .
29 So you think you were dead ? ’
30 So you reckon you 're getting somewhere . ’
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