Example sentences of "you have [adv] [vb pp] in " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I 'm Jane Walsh — I hear you 've just moved in next door . ’
2 But first … ’ she paused in mid-stride , looking back enquiringly , ‘ you 'd better put in a call to the police . ’
3 You 'd better come in here . ’
4 One possibility is for you to set aside time to train yourself ( as you 've probably done in the past ) , with structured guidelines from us here .
5 Well you 've probably seen in erm the newspapers you can now buy small computers for one hundred or two hundred pounds , but they 're not really what we 're talking about , because the very smallest computers of this sort , like the Sinclair and the B B C computer , do n't have any sort of storage for the data .
6 Who makes the kitchen fol , that you 've probably got in your kitchen .
7 It , it 's , it 's not you , it 's not until you 've probably worked in another place and come here or go
8 I had , therefore , hoped to obtain money in the current financial year for this proposal , but , as you 've probably read in the press , the moratorium on expenditure prevented an progress on this proposal .
9 And that I 'm horribly jealous of all the women you 've probably had in the past .
10 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 ?
11 And my enormous thanks go to my own Table , Chester seventy six , very very true friends indeed and the same for the whole of my own area , Area thirty six Wirral and the Marches , where nothing has been too much trouble and they are here today as you 've just seen in some considerable strength .
12 ‘ The one you 've just done in Cheltenham ? ’ she asked , catching Cara 's excitement as she waited expectantly for her to go on with more details .
13 In a more general sense I am fascinated by some of the things you 've just mentioned in your introduction , the question of continuity in German history , how we , how this marvellous nation , the nation of Beethoven and Wagner and Marx and Freud , actually finishes up going to war twice against its European neighbours , and in the Second World War in particular committing these awful atrocities .
14 You 've not looked in the bookcase !
15 One of those you 've already met in detail in terms of kinetics as that was the idea of reaction was n't it Chris ?
16 You 've never implored in your life , ’ Ruth murmured , resting her wet head on his shirt for a second before pulling away and perching on the edge of the lounger .
17 ‘ First you try to kill yourself by running off into a blizzard , and now you risk life and limb because you ca n't even bring yourself to admit to me that you 've never skied in your life before . ’
18 Look boy , you 've never played in an eleven side match before , .
19 And you 've always lived in Stromness ?
20 ‘ That 's all right for you to say , since you 've always worked in passionless chemical engineering . ’
21 There have to be , there are particular reasons why er after revolutionary upheavals you very often get authoritarian forms of government and I would say in Russia and i i in a sense it 's linked with Harold 's question as well about erm the Chinese following a Stalinist model of economic reconstruction think what you 've actually got in Russia is not this sort of mass hankering after authoritarianism but you 've got a situation where the bureaucracy that controls a completely devastated , backward economy , which is what they 've actually got in the early nineteen twenties , where the working class democracy has just disappeared really with , with the , with the economic collapse , with the factories shutting down , with all of the old communist party militants going into the Red Army or getting sucked into the state bureaucracy with that sort of complete collapse really , economically and socially and politically , you 've got a situation where the central priority of the leadership is to build up Russian industry as quickly as possible so that Russia has got the armed forces it needs
22 Car drivers for instance , you you get car you the Your neighbour is probably the nicest bloke you 've ever met in your life .
23 I 'm not totally without feelings — ’ Then he broke off with a frown and added , ‘ Though , as the most obnoxious specimen you 've ever met in your entire life , I ca n't expect you to believe that . ’
24 What 's the weirdest thing you 've ever seen in an audience when you 've been onstage ?
25 We pulled into Coventry police station and instead of going to a cafe , as we had hoped , we got shut in one cell and left there for about two hours with the most revolting sandwiches you 've ever seen in your life .
26 Mind you , it 's still more money than you 've ever seen in your life . ’
27 Myself I never worried about I was one of the biggest scruffs you 've ever seen in your life actually .
28 Is n't that the most beautiful photo you 've ever seen in your life .
29 ’ People still come up to me on the streets all the time and ask the most personal kind of questions that you 've ever heard in your life , like , ’ How could you do such-and such on screen ? '
30 It 's always been a Dark Force , and you 've only succeeded in harnessing a minuscule aspect of it .
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