Example sentences of "you [verb] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
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1 | ‘ And ye pin-pointed the position ? ’ |
2 | ‘ Ye look like ye met a vampire . ’ |
3 | ‘ Have ye heard the radio ! ’ he shouted , rushing up to the bar . |
4 | D' ya want a biscuit ? |
5 | D' ya want a biscuit ? |
6 | D' ya want a chocolate one ? |
7 | D' ya want a game of table tennis ? |
8 | D' ya want a cup of Dawn ? |
9 | d' ya want a coffee ? |
10 | Now what d' ya think the answer to that is ? |
11 | D' ya think the City Hospital would do bone marrow transplant ? |
12 | At the funeral near Belfast , Jack was startled by a tap on the shoulder in the church and a man 's voice hissing , ‘ Do ye want a lift to the cemetery ? ’ |
13 | ‘ But do ye want a lift ? ’ |
14 | Wary of causing further commotion , Jack said OK and found to his astonishment at the end of the service that the question had not been ‘ Do ye want a lift ? ’ at all — not at all , at all as they say in the Emerald Isle — but ‘ Do ye want to lift ? ’ , and as he staggered along on his then-arthritic hip bearing the coffin with five other pall-bearers , he kind of wished he 'd stuck to ‘ No thank you , I 'll walk . ’ |
15 | d' ya know the profit sharing 's up to thirty one percent , thirty one hours up to now and there 's another one , another one to go in yet |
16 | D' ya know , d' ya know , d' ya know the home run and all that ? |
17 | ‘ Because , ’ Winnie said , very smartly , ‘ of the way ye leap the counter . ’ |
18 | ‘ Ye told the truth , ’ Rab said . |
19 | Ye get bombed in this country if ye show a light . |
20 | Did ye lock the place up after ye ? ’ |
21 | So , have ya , have ya seen the snow conditions then ? |
22 | ‘ Ye look a bit skinny , ’ the woman said . |
23 | D' ya like the headmaster ? |
24 | ‘ Do n't ye remember the name of your own neighbours , boy ? ’ |
25 | D' ya , d' ya remember the name of er , of notes ? |
26 | ‘ Did ye see the wife this week Tam ? ’ |
27 | Now , dae ye know the date of Ángel 's birth or do n't ye ? ’ |
28 | According to John Graham , who knew Glasgow well , Sim was ‘ the only man of our town 's set of lawyers that he can think proper to trust it with , ye know the naturall temper of those lawyers of a low class is to be sharpers , and that s what ye would avoid … ’ |
29 | How d' ya move a country ? |
30 | How d' ya move a country ? |