Example sentences of "that you [modal v] [adv] [verb] a " in BNC.

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1 They 're aware that you would n't want a bunch of dickheads like them moving in next door , as ‘ Neighbor ’ makes clear .
2 ‘ As a matter of fact , I had taken it for granted that you would n't want a boring old fart like me trailing after you round Siena . ’
3 ‘ Penry , ’ she said , frowning , ‘ are you saying you — well , that you would n't want a relationship with me if I were frigid , like Melanie ? ’
4 Erm I found the , the greeting and the appropriate sociability to start with very hesitant but I think that was most probably just nerves on your part Robert , I do n't think it was something that you would usually have a problem with .
5 The idea behind it is that you ca n't achieve a total look with one brand but must combine products from both ends of the market for a contemporary image .
6 " It 's not like other sports , in that you ca n't watch a tournament unfold in front of you .
7 It was a coup d'etat. ’ -Margaret Thatcher ‘ As for the leaders of the former Alliance parties , I will say no more than this : they have never learned what every woman knows — that you ca n't make a souffle rise twice . ’
8 The first point is that you ca n't make a meaningful choice of subjects without adequate information .
9 Other than that the neck feels really good and solid , and although it 's of the slim , wide variety ( 43.75mm at nut ) the fingerboard is n't so wide that you ca n't wrap a thumb over the top if you 're so inclined .
10 I mean , to be quite honest about it , it 's a , it 's an unsatisfactory settlement , from whichever political party that you come from , and it 's about time , perhaps , the conservatives recognised that you ca n't support a national government policy that does as much damage to the people of LIncolnshire as this transport supplementary grant settlement has done .
11 Are you so trapped in a time of royalty and titles that you ca n't envisage a world in which a woman has obligations ? ’
12 You 're so twisted with suspicion that you ca n't see a hand in front of your face without imagining there 's a dagger in it !
13 Mr Lavery said his would be delicious , and that you ca n't over-fertilise a pumpkin , or it wilts .
14 That a preposition is a bad thing to end a sentence with , or that you ca n't have a sentence with out a verb .
15 Unfortunately , officers are in a position of sometimes telling a prisoner at the end of a week , that you ca n't have a bath or a shower and there is no change of clean underwear .
16 One problem with this kind of editing is that you may not get a clean cut at the points where you stop and start .
17 You need to be ‘ with it ’ , because you can never guarantee that you wo n't have a launch failure or end up in a field instead of back where you started .
18 Even so , being tempted into keeping the flowers until they are past their best will mean that you wo n't have a satisfactory pressed flower picture with which to remember them .
19 So sorry can I just ask , so in effect you have n't shifted your ground from the view which you expressed in paragraph three point six of your submission where you 've just confirmed in fact that you 'd rather have a proper or the ability to make a sort of proper measured allocations , part of which would make provision or allow the facility to cater for major inward investment ?
20 Are you really saying that you 'd rather see a rubbish tip than fairways ? ’
21 There were so many people in the room that you could not pass a needle between them , so how it was that the Gypsy Kings , carrying large musical instruments and followed by a television crew , came to arrive at the dinner table unmaimed , must remain a mystery for ever .
22 would would also be wise for any new settlement which you chief specify , that any new settlement you may recommend should also include some provision for expansion land , and my point I think is that you could not divide a settlement as big as five thousand , I think it would be reasonable to say a new settlement make with a an eventual capacity of say three and a half thousand , that might be appropriate around Greater York .
23 ‘ Normally I 'm accused of the reverse , ’ he says dryly , adding that you could not slip a playing card between him and the rest of the shadow Cabinet on policy .
24 ‘ Yes , and you also told me , yesterday , that you could n't do a thing about it . ’
25 Rufus had forgotten how often he castigated the press for inaccuracy , how he constantly said to Marigold that you could n't believe a word you read .
26 Whatsername took us to right , Alice and Kath did n't realize that you could n't write a cheque , did you ?
27 And after all , I knew that you could n't plead a prior engagement . ’
28 I knew by now that you could n't run a gallery without the essential combination of new work and stock .
29 But Einstein had shown that you could n't use a very small amount of light ; you had to use at least one packet , or quantum .
30 In the school , I was told in the First Aid that you could always tell a fractured femur ( which happened with elderly women as a rule ) .
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