Example sentences of "and you [modal v] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 And you might even find the James of both doctors scratched out and substituted more than once , such was the atmosphere of indecision which gripped the enclave .
2 And you might even find the occasional short sequence that features language you are studying in class .
3 You may need a lot of confidence a lot of support and you might even need some help looking after your children if they 're quite young .
4 And you might even have to do this er for an interim period or something
5 You get something else that says , if , if lost return to , and you might also want to discard the piece of cardboard at the back , because the storage binder does get very full .
6 And you might both like to talk to each other now about what you found easy what you found hard because Kelly found some bits hard , you thought oh it 's obvious , did n't you ?
7 And you might well argue of course that if you are subsidizing films which have no cultural merit or whatever then why we are doing this and that , that would be a question to ask .
8 Because at the end of the day , if something does happen you 've got all this filling in to do and you might well turn around and say It was n't my fault , you could turn around and say it was their fault for coming by .
9 You 've been with me for a whole week now and you might just as well have been a girl , or a boy without balls .
10 Squeeze it tight and you might just manage to get a hard-on , you miserable little rat ! ’
11 A tour of the brewery shows little has changed over 150 years and you might just catch a glimpse of the ghost of old John Arkell .
12 And you might just see me in the background of one of the shots .
13 So if you hit the garage you 're going very very slowly and you might just give yourself a jolt but you would n't hurt yourself quite so much .
14 However , much demolition is done on a piece work or per day basis , and you might simply be talking about the loss of a day 's work or a day or two 's profit .
15 All might go well and you might simply relive and re-experience a happy time in your life .
16 Keep it together , Piper , and you might still get out of this alive .
17 think back to a few years back when I was in training about a job and you might still think it now , but I could n't give , put ideas over to somebody on one-to-one training .
18 You do n't know that and you might never know it .
19 You would never quite know what you might find here ; you would certainly find unexpected flights of stairs which might lead anywhere at all , and you would surely sometimes come upon doorways you had not known existed .
20 You have not yet read the whole novel — and you would normally read a text all the way through before you seriously get down to translating it .
21 These include pounding head , dry mouth , stiff face muscles , sweaty palms , tension in the neck and shoulders , a desire to go to the lavatory and the feeling that sitting calmly is a great strain and you would rather be pacing up and down the room .
22 It , it is , it , it is seen as a possibility that if you use carry forwards as a way of finding the reductions , A you would n't actually reduce a service on the face of it , and you would also , it would also give you a chance to examine where those reductions in services could be found in the coming months , er , rather than take decisions immediately .
23 Wh what you 're also saying is , is right though , that within that the danger is that inequalities get too great and you would also need a set of policies which would stop that inequality .
24 [ … ] nowhere , except Paris , is it performed better than here , and you would doubtless be well instructed to see me sometimes beat time [ battre la mesure ] and give the tempos [ mouvemens ] with Lully 's famous stick [ canne ] .
25 At the beginning of the 1980 's a typeface would have cost around $4,500 and you would probably have had to wait a couple of weeks while it was digitised from some master copy .
26 And because you are so much older , you would n't see yourself as competing for the same resources , and you would probably have matured in ways emotionally , that would make you accept and identify with the parental values , rather than , than feel sad or , or resentful , because you felt you were more like your brother , as it were , and you were being discriminated against .
27 This is what happens with tax exempt sources and by looking at a TESSA and assuming you pay the maximum each year which are those figures and assuming that the interest rate stays at seven and a half percent , it wo n't but it 's seven and a half percent at the moment , then this is what happens , at the end of the first year you 've put in your three thousand your interest at seven and a half percent is two twenty five and you would otherwise pay tax at fifty six at twenty five percent or twenty or forty which would be those figures , but you do n't .
28 Wherever you were stationed postings tended to come out of the blue , and you would quite often arrive back from leave to find that in your absence you had been posted elsewhere .
29 It 's too hot and it would n't be good for you and you would hardly look very impressive with a great bandage twined round your ankle like the beginnings of a mummifying session . ’
30 Stansted is by the Government to be a major airport of the future and you would therefore assume that the Government would be planning that development but it is now clear that Stansteds future is based on unknown or undisclosed information of genius arithmetic and a desire to listen only to the aviation industry .
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