Example sentences of "[adv] our [noun] " in BNC.

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1 For the purpose of this guide these terms will be used as they are in themselves descriptive of the types of valuation report we may be asked to prepare , although naturally our clients will not use this terminology .
2 forgotten all about it , anyway she found a little dent apparently our Laura said that 's just as bad as finding lumps .
3 Well apparently our load facts according to I mean they 're sixties all the time so
4 But she quotes approvingly our television critic , Richard Last , a month or so back : ‘ Melvyn Bragg 's controversial A Time to Dance ( BBC1 ) ended on a believably tender note , suggesting that it was his producer or director , rather than the author , who miscalculated the grossness of earlier episodes . ’
5 In the following days and weeks my mother and I took turns to visit him every day ; we realized how much our presence meant to him .
6 The problem is not so much our ignorance over the issues relevant to a discussion of epidemiology and risk , appalling though that is , as the confusion of our feelings about sex itself .
7 Getting over H2 is very much our concern , and trials to ensure that teachers learning to ‘ drive the unit ’ have a low failure rate are essential , and quite possible .
8 If they are so much our superior in everything else , one would think that their insurance-based systems might be better also .
9 Eva was in total agreement : " I admired so much our officers who lived all the time with the women in the hostels .
10 So you see , my friend , how much our King needs your help , in order to defeat his enemies . ’
11 Doubt is not so much our problem as everybody 's problem .
12 These modern apartments are our Club Choice in Lanzarote and very much our Club base on the island , central to Club 18–30 activities and the facilities of this lively resort .
13 ‘ Think how much our tourist industry is in debt to him .
14 Stevenson would certainly respond by insisting that however much our conception of the world is socially determined , and even if there is no level of brute fact which is just how things are , there is still all the difference between a socially agreed mode of representing actual or expected , but not necessarily welcomed , reality , and an effort to decide on what to favour and what disfavour in this reality .
15 For us , worship is merely our duty to respond to God 's love by a discipline which , for most Christians , amounts to one visit to the local church a week .
16 As a result of these pressures we are forced to modify somewhat our style of approach in order to shed light upon certain aspects of our main topic which have remained unexplored hitherto , but this modification of style , as will become clearer in the sequel , does not invalidate our earlier approach , but rather structurally complements it .
17 We do all our drinking in private , you see , in the family .
18 It would be like having all our soldiers in the front line at the same time .
19 Oddly enough our pigs did n't do so well at market .
20 It 's only our video 's gone
21 He said : ‘ Part of the problems that we had last week was that the Cabinet was out of touch with backbench feelings … and not only our feelings but those in the constituencies .
22 Only our London intelligence people know of the safe house .
23 Is it only our culture ? he wrote .
24 Only our faith , our soul 's endeavour ,
25 ‘ Rupinder may be working in America , ’ Mrs Puri would tell her friends at their monthly kitty parties , ‘ but she is loving only our Punjab .
26 But eventually she persuaded us she meant it and we went and it was an invaluable experience meeting not only our missionary partner but the people among whom she lives and and works and has done for many years .
27 In the 100 metres Britain 's record was dismal — only our steeplechasers in the men 's track events had done worse — with just three medals : two bronze with George Ellis in 1954 and Peter Radford four years later , and one gold from the only British sprinter ever to have won the title , Jack Archer , exactly forty years earlier .
28 Not only our farmers but everyone else would suffer if we followed the views expressed yesterday by the Leader of the Opposition .
29 We shall not go into the variety of psychological mechanisms which convert terrible actuality into pleasing imagination , but there is one of them , sado-masochism , which demands attention because it explains why tellers of harsh truths so often offend not only our sentimentality but our moral sensibility .
30 I am convinced that it was only our privatisation proposals which allowed us to bring gas as a real possibility — now a probability , and almost certainly a certainty — to Northern Ireland .
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