Example sentences of "[conj] you 've [vb pp] to " in BNC.

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1 If we go back to that first , second slide , if you 're still alive in thirty years time , you may actually want the money that you 've gifted to people ten years ago , and erm that 's the problem you 've got .
2 Yeah , Could I also just quickly comment on the differences between columns H and I that you 've referred to .
3 All business is taken , so that particular , those particular items that you 've referred to I am already seeking to schedule that business for tomorrow , but I do n't want to preempt the situation and chance my arm any further than what it is , because I could end up falling on my face and I want to try and avoid that .
4 The reality is that you 've said to British Rail , you can bid for those franchises that nobody else wants
5 Pipeline business is the stuff that you 've sent to head office , been put on the shelf , and has n't issued yet , because of maybe medical in the writing , or there 's complications with it , you know , it 's sat on the shelf , but it has n't actually , the policy has n't wanged itself to the client .
6 Well thanks President for that welcome and thank you colleagues , Congress , for the welcome that you 've given to me .
7 I said : ‘ Mrs Ledingham says that you 've agreed to something metal . ’
8 Same way on your broad spreadsheets , you may include sources of references , mainly people that you 've spoken to , that provided you information .
9 What people everyone that you 've spoken to ?
10 I do hope that you 've come to terms with pregnancy now . ’
11 ‘ I feel very angry that you 've come to a conclusion about me without discussing the matter with me . ’
12 I could say that you 've come to the wrong place , but I wo n't . ’
13 " When you 've finished saying all that you want to say about these things , though , do you feel that you 've come to any definite conclusion ? "
14 The fact that you 've come to the end of the the .
15 As I said earlier , I 'm pleased that you 've come to Girton for this symposium , come away from your normal surroundings in the perhaps stuffy office in some district council to the beauty of the wide open spaces here out in the countryside .
16 So erm on on the basis on the assumption on the assumption that you 've put to me , then I would be prepared to accept that a hundred and twenty two hectares would be a reasonable level .
17 Because , in the current climate of debate , the drive to preserve the boundaries of class through culture can dissolve ( slip ? ) too easily into a concern with race , with the myth of white ethnicity , the myth , that is , that you 've got to be white to be British .
18 This can mean , in effect , that you 've got to be licensed for as many copies as you have machines .
19 no well because your looking down on every body else you tend to feel erm , well I feel sort of that you 've got to er feel responsible for them and look after them
20 Now which are the ones that you 've got to group ?
21 Whatever it might be that interests you , but something that you 've got to be thinking about , in your share time .
22 Right well that 's something that 's something that you 've got to you 've got to differentiate .
23 Also it is a common feature of course that you need to order the resources , that you have the resource in terms of people or the economy or the armed forces , you need to order those resources to try to achieve your ends erm and we 'll look at that later , the aims that you 're going for in foreign policy so they 're common , that you 're in the same environment , that you 've got to m er whatever the resources you have you have to try to organize them to achieve your ends and so on .
24 And er , nobody will phone you and say that you 've got to be here , there and everywhere .
25 You talk about asking questions you talk about the product that you 've got to up to the question the problems that you .
26 Right yeah erm so that can be , that can be a bit awkward but still some of the older stuff can give you a bit of a grounding in , in , in , in , in , in what it 's about if you can find anything relevant and sometimes you 've just got to sort of wander round the library and pick things up off the shelves like at random and see , see if you can find something in the index or find something in the contents pages that sort of vaguely coincides with what the you know what 's been talked about in the class that week erm sometimes if you keep looking you might actually be dead lucky and find one of the recommended books has actually come back in erm you may find that you 've got to be a bit flexible about that because , you know , if a topic 's dealt with in November you may not get a chance to see the book until you know kind of , I do n't know , February or something , you know I mean so it , it sometimes does mean you 've got to do the reading like a bit displaced from the from the classes
27 It just generally makes you more aware of the closness of the ground and that you 've got to be more careful at these sort of heights
28 But during the period of the war the bakers sadly fell down to about the middle of the table through the old saying that you 've got to be patriotic and help the war effort .
29 Jobs are scarce at the moment , so you 've got to be realistic . ’
30 ‘ More people are paying attention , so you 've got to be more on the ball if you want to keep doing what you 're doing .
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