Example sentences of "[vb base] you 'd [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I expect you 'd think nothing to her .
2 ‘ I expect you 'd like me out of the road .
3 I expect you 'd like me to disappear now ? ’ she suggested , hovering on the threshold of the main cabin .
4 ‘ Then I expect you 'd like your usual Irish whiskey , it 's still in the cupboard there . ’
5 This is something to be aware of : say you 'd like it loud if you would , otherwise as a mistaken token of respect you 'll hardly hear it .
6 Well , you said if I brought a couple of mates down you 'd get us in .
7 The lads that are on strike well I mean you 'd think it 'd be vice versa him being like a blackleg er that 's er they 'd be agitating but he 's vice versa .
8 As soon as you walk through the archway , I mean you 'd expect it to be an open
9 erm Nothing at all really at the moment , erm obviously it 's early days yet as far as erm speedway goes , I mean you 'd imagine it sort of getting a bit late in the day really , to get things organised .
10 ‘ You mean you 'd let me be a kept woman ? ’
11 In Walsall Wood erm as I say , we used to have er two big bags full on a Fri Friday and then in the week we could go up but you 've got your bread but , you know , yo the men would be , I can just picture them with their little , all this pretty coloured paper would all be in little piles and when there were no customers , they would be wrapping the rice , the raisins , the currants , all in these pretty papers you see and they knew , I mean you 'd ask them for currants and they never sort of knew , I did n't quite understand how they could pick by , it 'd be by the paper you see .
12 I mean you 'd see it going round the town quite regularly emptying the gullies .
13 You mean you 'd like it if I interrupted you when you were doing something
14 Cos I mean you 'd have your employer plan for the year anyway really .
15 Aghast at the roll-call of drunks , adulterers and pederasts that Central Office had fobbed off upon him , the baffled chairman turned to Cooper-Key and asked ‘ I do n't suppose by any change you 'd consider it yourself would you ? ’
16 Even got myself a nice little vacation landward of Seattlefish on Earth — hills , rivers , air you could breathe , that sort of stuff , and the sky so clear you 'd figure you could see forever .
17 And they 'd , they 'd come in for surgery and you know you 'd nurse them back again .
18 ‘ I heard — and you know you 'd go yourself if someone needed you . ’
19 I wish you were here , my dearest love ; I know you 'd like it .
20 ‘ Think about it and let us know when you get back — we wo n't pressure you , but I know you 'd have nothing to do but relax and be your wondrous self . ’
21 ‘ I suppose you 'd like me to go into purdah ? ’ she enquired scathingly .
22 ‘ I suppose you 'd like me to tell you where we found them ? ’
23 ‘ I suppose you 'd like us to walk all the way to Liverpool ? ’
24 " Well I suppose you 'd describe it as … windiness . "
25 ‘ But by the time I was eighteen , I realised that , as much as I loved studying the past , my greatest joy came from — well , I suppose you 'd describe it as planning things and watching them grow . ’
26 But er I do n't really remember erm people going out to work much ex except , I suppose you 'd call them the lower classes , or not really the working classes because er , but the lower classes they would take in washing .
27 In my view it 's even more interesting than the Soane museum in Lincoln 's Inn Fields ; a perverse neo-classicism I suppose you 'd call it .
28 ‘ I suppose you 'd call it that but I did n't look at it that way .
29 I suppose you 'd call it ‘ Glorious theft for the sake of the Revolution ’ .
30 Clues , I guess you 'd call them . ’
  Next page