Example sentences of "and you [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If you are earning more money and you hav n't got enough points , they could move you from a specialist department to a police station .
2 Yeah and you Bill .
3 Now that 's a modern version , again I made that for a couple of years ago but the tradition there was you knitted on hands and you ladies will probably know , four pins , no seams , all on the circular , right up to the neck and then the cast on the sleeve there and again , no seams .
4 There is very little connection now between our people and you Europeans .
5 That old boy that I spoke to , when his he was with his daughter , I said you give me my bloody keys and you money !
6 ‘ Be quiet , Florence , and you Belle ; it might n't fit her . ’
7 And you rats are leaving the ship before it sinks , ’ hissed Lucie .
8 Thus Anselm of Canterbury , referring to Galatians 7:19 , speaks of St Paul as his ‘ sweet nurse , sweet mother ’ ; and continues , with reference to Luke 13:34 : ‘ And you Jesus , are you not also a mother ?
9 You think , God help me I do n't want to die , and you close your eyes and you sill see him .
10 Tim was fascinated at seeing overturned engines on the side of the line , and you girls were a little anxious as you saw me and a nice Salvation Army wife tear down the track when the train stopped to get water from the engine !
11 Think of Emily Bronte 's ’ Wuthering Heights ’ and you probaby think of Laurence Olivier 's classic film .
12 I know you come from America , and you Americans do not believe in things like that .
13 However , the major problem , and you Ma'am have already touched upon this as well as the Chairman and I am sorry to be repetitive but we do serve all yachtsmen , two and a half to three million of them whilst being financially supported by only sixty five thousand of them .
14 And sir , both of you , both you sir , Mr and you sir , Mr , er I would like to thank you for the way in the way you have conducted this enquiry .
15 And you mum ?
16 And you mum I 've got yeah , will do erm I 've forgotten what I was gon na say now .
17 You listen — and you casework them . ’
18 So — you listen in silence ; and you casework them ; and you set up case-conferences about them ; and you refer them to other agencies ; and you work up your notes on case-handling for the journals . ’
19 ‘ Oi 'm a nopenin' baht , ’ the Smallholder had replied , with the same stolidity that marked his demeanour at the crease , ‘ and you messes with a nopenin' baht at your peril . ’
20 And you Father ? ’
21 Mr Justice Mummery ruled in favour of the publisher and owner of the Daily Mail , the Mail on Sunday and You magazine in an action against Mr Christopher Arnold , a businessman .
22 I did get and proved the place I 've been going that actually more accidents due to blocking and you sort of back up the stairs with you
23 and you sort of fill up the battery , and then you can draw it off , but the battery itself is n't making electricity it 's just storing cells , like the little cells in that , the cells you get in your normal little batteries , and when they 've finished making it you chuck 'em away .
24 It 's really depressing and you 've got to stop thinking about it , 'cause if you do n't then the emotions will come and you start crying , and you sort of think to yourself , ‘ No I 've got to stop thinking , I 've got to do something . ’
25 But er they were always er well-remembered , and er w Spanish Civil War through , I suppose nowadays , you call them fringe newspapers , but there was this paper we used to get at the tim at the time It was n't the er Morning Star , or even it 's predecessor , erm but you got a paper and you sort of heard the other side .
26 Er and you sort of er er a general labourer actually , but you picked up some knowledge , some knowledge of the of the er business .
27 I went in one of them cage things and I got it over — well , you have to push with your legs and you sort of pull with your arms and nobody else could do it .
28 And you 've got hair that falls in your face and you sort of , and all those things you 've got to learn to cope with because if you 're worried about what you 're doing with your hands , or your feet , or your hair , then you ca n't then concentrate on putting over your information effectively .
29 I , I compare test matches to more like the chess game you know it 's slower and you sort of you know whatever but these are people who would , did not to test games you know they did n't sort of say okay we 've now met this Pack a Ball thing where you know and everything else .
30 I want to try and get one before May before the exam , but there is a superb production on i the summer , it 's on June and July and it 's at an open-air theatre erm in Lincolnshire and what people do is they go and take a picnic and you sort of take your rug and sit there and cos it it 'll be hot in the summer it would be really nice and you watch it outdoors and it 's in this big stately home which is in it 's own grounds and there 's gift shops and restaurants and bars and obviously wo n't go in the bars but you know there 's lo it 's beautiful and like a big stately home you can wander round the gardens for a bit and then go and watch the performance and if it rains then there 's a canopy you can pull the canopy over like at Wimbledon and you know it 's a really nice day .
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