Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] you [vb past] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 You went to college so you got into the Socialist Worker 's Party or whatever .
2 You can take that tin that you got in er you can take that tin as a pencil case that you got pardon ?
3 Peter Yeo was obviously delighted to do any service , however modest , for her and bustled her away , returning belatedly to ask McLeish if he would like a similar facility , which he accepted , obedient to the unwritten CID rule that you looked after your physical needs at any moment that opportunity offered , because you never knew when you were going to get stuck for hours without help .
4 rock and roll You know that tape that you had with all the rock and roll 's greatest hits .
5 Yeah because then you could have that , you could like have a story board for that advert that you thought of .
6 When I first started teaching drama I accepted the prevailing dogma that you started by getting children to work individually , then in pairs , then in small groups and eventually ( when they were really good at drama ) in larger groups !
7 Sentencing Clarke to 21 months in prison and a 3 year driving ban , Judge Francis Allen said , ’ nothing this court can do can remedy the harm that you caused by your decision to drive that day .
8 You had this lump of rock that you dangled from a thread and people discovered that it always pointed in the same direction , so if you were on board , a ship for the first time people were able to travel in a ship without having to hug a coast all the way across or navigate to where they could see .
9 If you are on a site-recce and you hit on an idea or a way of solving your problem , do a dry run .
10 I remember being at primary school and the boys went to play football and you sat in the corner playing talking or the boys played football and the girls , would you believe it , got sex education !
11 it was very clever , I watched the first couple because people who like Harry Enfield 's comic characters switched on , just to see what he was like and before you knew it you were twenty minutes into a half hour programme and you stuck with it to the end .
12 Yeah , cos I made you a sandwich and you sat in the garden chair .
13 And of course er when an article became , when you needed an article or something broke down in the car and you needed to m=make something up on the lathe o it was made on the premises .
14 I had grown up with class but it was a shifting , unstable , changing force and you fancied across it regardless , for the world was open .
15 To be honest , after paying 2.50 for the shareware disc and 10.00 for the registration fee you would save yourself money and disappointment if you went to your local bookshop and bought two books on sales techniques .
16 be careful of the roads because a car ca n't erm ca n't always stop in time it 's up to you not to walk out in front of them cos they can say oh well you should be able to stop in time but in practice if you drove to be able to stop in time if somebody stepped out in front of you you 'd never above about five miles an hour you know ? you must sort of stick to the speed limits I do n't believe it we got gaining on the car in front .
17 Er then he made the I 'd better cut back to the business card because you jumped into the statement of purpose erm you assum er there was an assumed er was okay erm I put superb and I ca n't remember what that actually was there .
18 So you knew how to carry out a literature search before you came on this course ?
19 I thought it was on the right hand side as you went into village .
20 They exchanged a few banalities and then Patrick asked : ‘ You 're quite sure you did not have golf clubs in your car when you went to Romania ? ’
21 ‘ What went through your mind as you drove to the office to see me ? ’
22 You 'd recognize this if you are a driver and especially a driver who maybe has the opportunity of travelling long distance , now years ago when I was younger and perhaps some of you in the audience when you were younger , you could go from here to the South of England with no trouble , without a break and you 'd head on down the motorway and you , you 'd be alert and alive and er ready to meet up with all sorts of emergencies and you 'd drive quite well all the way down , non stop down the South of England , but if you 're like me now , when I get to Stafford on the motorway you 're beginning to feel as if you 've had enough and it 's difficult to try and keep your concentration as you used to years ago , and that 's how it can be in the truth sometimes , when we 've been with it a long time that , we grow older not only physically , but spiritually too we become very experienced in the truth and we become very sort of fat spiritually , we can live off of that fat ca n't we ?
23 ‘ Is that what you had in mind when you talked about my helping you ?
24 ‘ Well , Mr Fairfax , as you can see , we 've already made more progress than you managed on your own . ’
25 The lady , who founded the carers ' help line , er , in the literature that you provided for the programme was suggesting that the government should recognise that there are six million unpaid carers .
26 You know , the Pyramint that you bought in the little box with
27 The amplifier that you 're using on this tour , is that the Ray Butts amp that you used on Elvis 's ‘ Comeback Special ’ ?
28 The session that you started with Sarah , what was the main
29 Now , so we have n't got the reason for you gaining this skill that you had in the case of making scones , playing the clarinet .
30 ‘ So , you were a good , hard-working skivvy ; and the work that you did for the Clarion — was that worthwhile , too ? ’
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