Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] you [adj] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Perhaps I should get you two together . |
2 | erm or maybe I 'll consider you two down , you know as the describing side |
3 | No I 'll bring you some back . |
4 | so I 'll be , I 'll come down , I 'll be , I 'll be down tomorrow cos I 'm doing mince and dumplings and I 'll bring you some down |
5 | Alright , I 'll give you that then . |
6 | If you 're with a bank and you 've been with them a few years , they 'll give you all kinda loans . |
7 | I 'll give you twenty now . |
8 | So I 'll give you some here to do . |
9 | you know got enough to go to university , things like that to of been top dog all your school life , it might do you good not to be |
10 | And he could n't stop it , I , I never get over when the doctor said to him if I were you I would n't smoke , it 'll do you good not to smoke , so he did n't , and he stopped it |
11 | As well as rumours of troops of infantry escorting respectable citizens to afternoon tea in the suburbs , and the recommendation that gentlemen at a loose end because of the shortage of decent game reserves might turn their hand to a new blood-sport — ‘ We have got together a splendid pack this season , and the game is still so plentiful that I 'll bet we 'll show you some really first-rate sport ’ — the ‘ anti-garotte ’ movement launched by Punch invented various kinds of anti-robbery device . |
12 | I 'll expect you both down to dinner at eight . ’ |
13 | Yeah Rightio Jackie I 'll see you all tomorrow night . |
14 | As we have already observed ( see ( 35 ) ) , the verb see , in its ordinary uses , can not be expected to occur with an adverbal adjective , but this does appear to be the interpretation needed for ( 41 ) which may be considered substandard but is apparently possible in current British English : ( 41 ) even if the scheme does fail , I 'll see you comfortable Much more often , the idiomaticity works the other way , so that a set of lexical items that could fit the structure of ( 21 ) , with appropriate values , seem to give unacceptable sentences , as in ( 42 ) : ( 42 ) Eva played her opponent exhausted Wendy wiped the floor moist |
15 | ‘ I 'll keep you alive forever for this , ’ he continued . |
16 | ‘ I 'll take you all out tonight , a celebratory dinner . |
17 | ‘ We 'll take you two back to the centre to rest and recover , ’ said Rachel , then , looking up at the superintendent who was hovering anxiously , she asked , ‘ Has the incident been recorded in the accident book ? ’ |
18 | I 'll tell you that later . |
19 | ‘ We do have passion — otherwise I would n't be doing it , I 'll tell you that right now . |
20 | Yes , by the way I 'm gon na be able to see Max , I 'll tell you that now because I 've been dragged off to another conference , I 'm actually going down to the , to the rehabilitation workers ' phones |
21 | I goes I went to the end I goes look I 'll tell you all together get it over with I lost my balance and I dropped it . |
22 | Well I 'll tell you this once and then |
23 | I 'll tell you this too , and this is for nothing , somebody dumped that boy right in the shit , somebody dropped him in the shit from a great old height . |
24 | But I 'll tell you this much : she 'll have to spend most of her time with you 'cos I could n't put up with her round me feet all day . ’ |
25 | I 'll tell you this so that you know I 've problems too . |
26 | Erm schools I think schools is just up your street mainly because erm And I 'll tell you another why I think schools will benefit a lot of people going , first of all it 's a fairly new product so we 're really in the launch up stage . |
27 | They 'll leave you alone then , in case you decide to start telling it to them . ’ |
28 | But I 'll let you alone now and come and see how you 're feeling later . |
29 | No I 'll write you some down . |
30 | The shipping forecast said it should moderate later , so with luck I 'll get you X-rayed tomorrow . |