This section is from the book "The Science And Art Of Phrase-Making", by David Wolfe Brown. Also available from Amazon: The science and art of phrase-making.
303. At the beginning of phrases, you and your, in their inverted form, may safely sacrifice their normal position and are generally written as high or low as may be necessary in order to bring the second word of the phrase into its normal place. The regular form of you, when written initially, takes its normal position.
 
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