Example sentences of "you have [adv] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I 'm Jane Walsh — I hear you 've just moved in next door . ’ |
2 | ‘ Anyway , it amazes me that none of you has apparently thought of comparing the print-outs of yesterday with today 's work . |
3 | ‘ The jade you 'd already given to me , ’ she pointed out . |
4 | Is she an old friend — perhaps somebody you 'd previously met through your stepmother ? ’ |
5 | I was amazed you 'd even heard of it , to tell the truth . ’ |
6 | ‘ No , you should be all right , ’ he agreed , his smile still in place , ‘ but you 'd best leave after lunch tomorrow to give yourself plenty of time — just in case you get side-tracked , ’ he added , tongue-in-cheek . |
7 | And you 'd best go to the toilet before you leave . |
8 | ‘ So you 'd best live for ever , had n't you ? … |
9 | You did n't fall in love with someone in the space of a few days , just because you 'd finally succumbed to the lures of sex , or lust , or whatever had overwhelmed her ever since he 'd fished her out of the sea that first night … |
10 | The authorities would think you 'd finally cracked under the pressure of what had happened to your family . |
11 | Well you would be would n't you if you 'd nowhere to sleep on the night ? |
12 | ‘ Not at all as if you 'd just dismounted from a horse . |
13 | He always stayed calm , but he had a knack of turning things around so that you thought you were getting your own way when in fact you 'd just agreed with him . |
14 | If you 'd just rung from Bryn 's place I could have at least made myself presentable , cariad ! ’ |
15 | You used it again when you 'd just got off the train from Paddington tonight , when you pretended you were waiting for Mrs Downes — ’ |
16 | ‘ When you talked it was like you 'd just thought of it . |
17 | I 'm Marty Hunter — ( Marty thought Graham ) — and I just wondered If you 'd ever thought of doing any mob " |
18 | Sorry to keep you waiting but the bellman said he thought you 'd all gone to your rooms . ’ |
19 | Er had it been something that you 'd long sought after you know , like like in the mines where it had been an issue for some years ? |
20 | ‘ But nice Dr Blake here is going to make it feel better , and I think , to be on the safe side , you 'd better stay with us for a while , just so that we can make sure the headache does n't get any worse . |
21 | ‘ I think you 'd better stay at home , ’ Otley cautioned . |
22 | ‘ He 'd say , ‘ Listen , Joey , if you want to write a Homeboy , you 'd better stay in school . ’ ’ |
23 | ‘ Well I 'm coming with you , so you 'd better think of something . ’ |
24 | group you did n't , if you 'd said no there , I just threw it down and said well , you 'd better think of another one . |
25 | Well if you 've got to go in the garage , it 's too cold to go in there to finish the ship off so you 'd better paint in the house had n't you ? |
26 | If he found after two or three days that he was n't really making much headway , he would then , after he 'd left the police courts , say to me I think you 'd better go down street or somewhere and see if you can find |
27 | Looking down at the man who had quietly assisted her and whose clothes were now covered in the other man 's blood , she said , ‘ You 'd better go with them as well . ’ |
28 | ‘ You 'd better go to bed , ’ she said . |
29 | You 'd better go to St Stephen 's for tests : they 're properly equipped to handle this sort of thing . ’ |
30 | ‘ You 'd better go to the doctor , ’ said Apricot . |