Example sentences of "[verb] with our " in BNC.

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1 At home , we have used the Actuary — the magazine of the UK Actuarial Profession — to communicate with our members .
2 Culture is one of the best mediums we can utilize to communicate with our people .
3 Often we share many common objectives and interests with other agencies operating in our town in seeking to communicate with our communities .
4 A strange feeling of expectation mixed with our fear as we became caught up in the thrill of the hunt .
5 There is no inconsistency in my and my neighbour 's holding that we each should look after our own dog ( or sleep with our own wife , come to that ) .
6 The chairs we have now were actually designed with our chat show in mind , not so low that knees come up to chins and reveal too much sock , nor so wide as to encourage fidgeting , with an upright back to prevent slouching , and arm rests to give the nervous something to grip .
7 The comparisons he drew with our most successful rival trading nations were as instructive as they were , viewed collectively , alarming .
8 We were walking with our legs on ledges either side of a narrow passage when one of the ledges came to an abrupt end .
9 It uses the left side of our brain to project past failures , thus actively interfering with our ability to overcome the negative impact that we face .
10 To safeguard against this sort of distortion , yet without basically interfering with our random system , we can build in a sort of screening device which is called stratification .
11 A SFWP statement responded : ‘ Companies engaged in the robbery of our mineral and oil wealth should stop interfering with our democratic system in the hope of increasing their political influence ’ .
12 But if I went to Joyce and told him that his men were doing something that was n't fair to the police , trying us too hard or interfering with our time off , he 'd have his men right off that job in half an hour and there 'd be no grumbling . ’
13 As I said last week , he c he er made it appear to the British that he s sought to control the channel ports and with a large navy was then capable of interfering with our trade and in in indeed mounting an invasion , and that brought Britain into a war which could not be ended until the Germans sued for surrender and vice versa .
14 ‘ The problem lies with our present system of academic examinations where candidates compete against each other for grades so that there are winners and losers .
15 Well if that 's the case Bob , it 's really the fault lies with our client not with us .
16 She took on two alternating roles here , working for six-month periods as Acquisitions Librarian and as Serials Librarian , alternating with our other Assistant Librarian .
17 As we draw near to the table in the course of the nest few minutes to meet with our Lord , in the bread and in the wine , let's just remember today that the power , that the energy , that the spiritual renewal comes to us because God is with us and God is with us now , because of the activity of God the Holy Spirit .
18 Those of us from the South who left behind tree-strewn roads and gardens after the devastation of the recent October storm , were delighted to be in such beautiful surroundings again and to meet with our Lilleshall friends from other parts of the country .
19 I am glad they 've approved it because it 's , it 's removed any uncertainty there might have been about the nineteen nineties , slightly disappointing that they chose to tinker with our wording here and there , but , but by and large , not too unhappy .
20 ‘ There are lots of very important issues between general aviation and the CAA : the cost of safety regulation , concern that there should be no overlapping between JAA and Safety Regulation Group activity , anxiety that we have n't yet succeeded with our European partners in finding a common way of funding safety regulation .
21 But it is certainly enough to make us want to persist with our exploration of this theory and to examine in some detail ( in Chapter 7 ) the various possible explanations for the effect .
22 Our chances of ending the war quickly would certainly be greatly increased if the battle were won ; but if we failed to win it , even after what had already been achieved , our victory would merely be postponed and not rendered impossible , especially if we resolved in good time not to persist with our useless efforts at Verdun , but to take the initiative of attack elsewhere .
23 Now , over the smoking issue , the World Bank 's directors ( says one of them ) have been ‘ caught with our pants down ; and it 's so bloody embarrassing ’ .
24 ‘ Whatever you think , Dutch Intelligence are convinced they 'll try , and we do n't want to be caught with our trousers down like we were by the Nazis . ’
25 Well I know but this is , but this is where we 're caught with our pants down because we have n't got the thing
26 Moreover , what we perceive far exceeds what actually interacts with our nervous system ; for what interacts with our nervous systems is occurrent energy and what we perceive are continuant objects ( see earlier , p. 98 ) .
27 Moreover , what we perceive far exceeds what actually interacts with our nervous system ; for what interacts with our nervous systems is occurrent energy and what we perceive are continuant objects ( see earlier , p. 98 ) .
28 In turn , we structure our lives and influence our growth , development and behavioural patterns by continual interaction or feedback with the etheric field or Akasha , just as any evolving product of our own creative ability ( e.g. a musical composition or the contents of a book ) interacts with our consciousness and undergoes modification during the process .
29 The day starts with our tail-lift bus leaving the centre at 9.30 am to pick up the clients with the help of 2 escorts .
30 ‘ Then we 're hoist with our own petard .
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