Example sentences of "you [modal v] [verb] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 You may end up in the red , but as long as it 's not by too much , you 're less likely to have rows about it . ’
2 You ought to get out in the sunshine .
3 ‘ Then you must sleep out in the corridor . ’
4 You must come up in the fall ; it 's beautiful .
5 Even an agreement about the time you might get up in the morning , and who gets up first , for instance , is important .
6 You 'll end up in the gutter .
7 Otherwise you 'll end up in the Tower , not writing leaflets . ’
8 The way to overcome this is to sail slightly high of your intended course and you 'll end up in the right place .
9 Yes , you can see when the ball goes off , then you 'll end up in the far corner .
10 So you 'll getting up in the morning ?
11 You 'll find out in the morning , ’ Rosie replied , her voice floating towards Artemis through the handkerchief .
12 If you went all the way across the Lake of Dreams you 'd end up in the Lake of Death .
13 You 'd go out in the morning and be back again in the afternoon . ’
14 You did n't consider that , you er i As I say you 'd go out in the morning .
15 There was a Victorian air about it somehow there were , there were quite ladies who 'd kept it , almost the same sort of thing as you 'd find out in the country , country Ye Olde Elizabethan Coffee Shop type of thing you know , they they 'd be the er there was that atmosphere about it and you 'd buy lovely cakes and things like that .
16 I really think , although I would not be prepared to put it to the test , that you could go out in the streets of London in your nightdress and nobody would notice .
17 BE good to your secretary or you could end up in the worst seats on business flights and be booked into lousy hotels .
18 You could come out in the morning
19 In 1970 — if you were eighteen and could lay your hands on a little ready money — it was almost de rigueur to travel overland to Greece where , in an idyllic island setting , you could hang out in the coolest way imaginable with amiable drug-dealers and liberated chicks .
20 You used to go out in the in the wash-house and wash yourselves , under the cold water tap .
21 Explain and justify the options you would take up in the case of : even additions ; random additions ; , grouped additions ; no additions .
22 erm I think the consensus is that you would n't — that either space is infinite , or at the very least it it 's finite it has no edge , so if you went in one direction for long enough you would come back in the other direction .
23 As Rivera reached the door Schellenberg added , ‘ I need hardly say that if one word of this leaks out you will end up in the River Spree , my friend , and your cousin in the Thames .
24 There will be some perks around the 7th and 8th , but it wo n't be until well after the 14th that you will feel back in the swing of things again , particularly at work .
25 Of course you will wake up in the morning with a nervous disorder and a slightly lower IQ , but at least you wo n't have any itchy red lumps .
26 Then you will ride down in the cage to the bottom of the shaft — 294 feet deep .
27 I became a car driver again widely overtaking walkers and cyclists , and made forays of comfortable detective work returning to my cornucopian base , some of the victuallings within you will learn about in the Lewis section .
28 In addition you can sit out in the square as we did in Italy and have hamburgers and beer .
29 Well this you can sit down in the seats , you can look at the you can touch the tables , there 's not a lot of stuff but if if you got any sense of history you can get the feel of the place you know .
30 Yeah you can go out in the hall or go in the syndicate room
  Next page