Example sentences of "that you [verb] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ That doctor , she said that ye worry too much . ’
2 These hints had their final expression in an astonishing personal letter written by Knox to Mary on 26 October 1559 , claiming that ‘ if it be the office of a very friend to give true and faithful counsel to them whom he sees run to destruction for lack of the same , I could not be proven enemy to your Grace but rather a friend unfeigned ’ — even if moderation was never Knox 's strong suit and so , unable to keep up the quiet tone of the letter , he felt impelled to throw in a postscript : ‘ God move your heart yet in time to consider that ye fight not against man , but against the eternal God , and against his Son Jesus Christ , the only Prince of the kings of the earth . ’
3 ‘ Sure that ye do n't want some ? ’
4 ‘ Ye told me yerself that ye do n't like it here . ’
5 ‘ It was a good thing that ye did n't scream , ’ the detective said .
6 → We do n't really see Guitarist as a poster magazine , although we appreciate the fact that you approve so highly of James Cumpsty 's photos .
7 He also had to watch out for the bears that pounced on you if you stepped on the lines in the pavement , and the killer bats that hung upside down in the shadows under the roof of the railway arch , and the rats that came out of the cracks in the brickwork and infected you with their deadly diseases simply by breathing out into the same air that you breathed in .
8 And this is of course , as if I agree with the view that you expressed yesterday in a general context , although it was made specifically then in relation to one village , any recommendation I make in relation to that village , if it is based on the general principle , must apply by analogy also to Skelton , and I would have little choice but to recommend to the councils that they may wish or indeed they should , reconsider this question of washing-over or insetting elsewhere .
9 When fixing into the ceiling , you should ensure that you screw directly into the joists .
10 You r did I understand correctly that you ruled out sector six on grounds of coalescence ?
11 But , go back here , it 's interesting that you point out something I had n't really thought about , which is why I tend to use typefaces that are sort of garden variety — printer 's types , as opposed to the sweller Berthold revivals or whatever .
12 These have been the Saturn years — during which that planet 's insistence that you measure up to your potential has placed hurdles of all sorts in your way .
13 Is the punishment that you fear really likely ?
14 Feel the cool air that you breathe in and the warmer air that you breathe out .
15 Close your eyes and listen to your breathing , trying to regulate the rhythm and making sure that you breathe only through your nose .
16 Feel the cool air that you breathe in and the warmer air that you breathe out .
17 In some ways , in fact , it 's a bit less worthwhile , in that you tend not to think about social matters , people 's characters and things like that .
18 You 've you 've made it clear with him that you discriminate quite clearly between the people that go back to work because they 've got children or they 've got l lot of finan and they 've got to do a lot of financial obligations and those who who do n't .
19 That more likely is that you realised well nigh immediately that it was Mr , that 's why you said to Mr I 'm arresting you for harbouring an escapee .
20 ‘ It was probably only when you got outside that you realised how much circumstances looked against you .
21 Please use it as a reminder to ensure that you keep up the good work and the resolutions you have started .
22 In return , I hope very much that you keep on telling us what you think about the alumni services we provide , telling us what 's going on in your professional world and how you think the University ought to take account of it .
23 And she came to Whitfield , and she said Mr Whitfield , why is it that you keep on preaching on this , and you keep on using this text , and keep on saying you must be born again ?
24 These are all responses which were highly suitable in prehistoric times when events required either that you ran away as fast as you could or that you had a surge of energy to help you fight your way out of a difficult situation as ferociously as possible ( fight or flight behaviour ) .
25 The imperatives of competitive politics required that you ran flat-out from the start .
26 To the former , I suggest you read The Rainment of Light by David Tansley and to the others that you try out the following experiment .
27 In the end you had to try to put things that you saw out of your mind or else you would go mad .
28 Their house , Carceri , is a complex world of ancient stone galleries and courtyards , with weird ( and scheduled ) spiral staircases that you go up only to find yourself on the floor below the one you started on — an old dungeon perched among the treetops on a hillside overlooking the city , which they found by a miracle , and had converted .
29 Erm well I mean he seems to be implicating somehow here that the more that you go up to soul and intellect to the one , the more you properly become your true self .
30 Instead of taking it over a thirty five year period , what you would then have is that you go up very steeply let's say by putting lump sums or er regular capital premiums erm which you 'll receive a tax refund and then it stops but the benefits of the fund keep going so at age sixty they would have the same effect of reaching your pension there with no contributions
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