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

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1 a hell of a lot really , normally you would n't have the vinyl and normally I would think you would only put the tongue and groove not out of the polystyrene behind it and the vinyl , I ca n't see why people want tongue and groove that they go to all those lengths would you ?
2 Erm , I would think you 'll either have to get it from Scarborough or Whitby .
3 ‘ I should think you 'll soon get a new one . ’
4 Do n't think you 'll really buy new born babies a book not quite .
5 Do n't think you 'll ever find a home again !
6 Do you think you 'll ever get married ?
7 Do you think you 'll ever get your brother back again ?
8 Do n't think you 'll ever get that word
9 mm , well , I visit ladies in the nineties and they 're called Emma and Alice and Amy and all these names that are being used for children now , but I do n't think you 'll ever get Fred , Sidney
10 Yes , I do n't think you 'll ever get unanimity on something like this .
11 I do n't think you 'll ever get tha that to be done now .
12 Oh , I do n't think you could clearly dichotomize and say it was one thing or the other .
13 ‘ Do you think you could also play by your own rules and drop the formality ?
14 Do you think you could just open the door for me please !
15 Do you think you could just sweep that up
16 ‘ I do n't think you could honestly say it was going well just now , but it will do soon and that 's all that matters . ’
17 ‘ Do you think you could possibly curb your dislike and mistrust of me for that one evening ?
18 ‘ Do you think you could possibly look in on me in about fifteen minutes ?
19 Do you think you could possibly find me a small drink ? "
20 I do n't think you could ever hurt me , love ! ’
21 ‘ I do n't think you could ever call Ken a friend .
22 You 'd have to get rid of a lot of your assumptions before you could fully appreciate why I could n't live with a man I do n't love , or I do n't think you could ever understand why I ca n't accept to be maintained , to put myself at the disposal of another , be in another 's company twenty-four hours a day , share another 's pleasures and pains — and so on . ’
23 I do n't think you can even say , non-white , can you , nowadays .
24 I do n't think you can both stir it at the same time .
25 ‘ How dare you think you can just barge into my property !
26 Yes , but I do n't think you can just say all women are housewives .
27 reformat I mean you 've got to be you , knowledgable about your , the area in which you work , so I do n't think you can just wipe out the history of education that 's irrelevant .
28 You do n't grasp it when you 're young , and if you 're born , obviously as a lot of the population now are , much younger , and have n't really been either touched or involved in a war , it 's very difficult , it 's something which we 've all seen on television , we 've all seen it at the films and you tend if you 're not careful , to pick up the glamorous side of it , you do n't realise I do n't think and in fact I keep saying this — I do n't think you can ever realise what it must be like to be in a battle until you 've actually been there .
29 ‘ And I do n't think you can ever understand Italians .
30 Because what the Sale of Goods Act goes on to say is that if the goods contain a fault which is so obvious you should have noticed the fault while you were in the shop , or the shop assistant pointed out the fault to you while you were in the shop , then I do n't think you can really demand money back on that basis .
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