Example sentences of "[vb -s] we that " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Freidson ( 1977 , p.15 ) warns us that ‘ … confusion lies in the fact that the word profession is used to refer both to concrete historical occupations and to an intellectual construct or ideal type , without consistent attention to the relationship between the two ’ .
2 But Jesus ' teaching shows us that repentance is God 's joy .
3 It seems to us natural that love should be the commonest theme of serious imaginative literature : but a glance at classical antiquity or at the Dark Ages at once shows us that what we took for " nature " is really a special state of affairs , which will probably have an end , and which certainly had a beginning …
4 In Brompton Regis in Somerset an interesting seventeenth-century document shows us that what are now farmsteads were formerly hamlets of several separate farmsteads with tenements and cottages .
5 The character table shows us that only e' and a 2 " vibrations , corresponding to dipole changes in the x/y and z directions , respectively , can be IR active , so we expect five fundamental bands in the IR spectrum of PF 5 .
6 ( i mean the way he have sticked with specially dino shows us that — dino himself who expressed wishes for playing at the international level himself when he joined leeds — i guess he is a farther away now : the likes of Shearer , Wright ( a flop in the internationals ) , Cole ( hey there is one that puts them in the net ) and Ferdinand will have no problems keeping him out … )
7 Wrong horse … and speaking of odds , word reaches us that super-confident Hartlepool Conservative candidate Graham Robb is so much the punters ' favourite that the town 's biggest bookie has stopped taking bets .
8 Much medical opinion also assures us that hypnosis is not essential .
9 In an Author 's Note to the first book , Master and Commander , Patrick O'Brian assures us that ‘ … very often the improbable reality outruns fiction ’ and offers enough information about his sources ( in log-books , diaries and other contemporary records ) to confirm the authenticity of the events through which he displays his characters .
10 But the main there 'ere is , we have n't actually changed our position we have actually stated clearly that we wanted to achieve something , we wanted to make sure that what was being provided in that community was the best best thing possible within the resources available and that things developed on This amendment takes us that way forward and we are at least being clear to our principles rather than just being negatively obstructive .
11 Instead , the National Consumer Council 's previous work on consumer aid and advice convinces us that advice about money and credit problems — just like other types of advice — is best available as part of a general advice service , from non-specialist advice bureaux such as CABx .
12 Odd-Knut tells us that to ask a Lapp that question is like asking an Englishman how much money he has in the bank .
13 Hip-hop tells us that city life is impoverished , that real violence , as opposed to the symbolic stare-downs , is horrific .
14 The glass cone at Lemington , although incomplete , is one of few such survivals in Britain , and particularly in the region where the Venerable Bede tells us that French glassmakers were brought over to teach the ‘ English nation their handicraft ’ , which had been lost here after the departure of the Romans .
15 But experience tells us that adaptive behaviour most often reflects the intelligence of evolution rather than that of the animals it has so carefully programmed .
16 The fact that we are commanded to love even our enemies tells us that love is more of a decision than a feeling .
17 However Matthew 18:15 , cited earlier , tells us that is our responsibility when things are going wrong .
18 In the early books of The Prelude Wordsworth repeatedly tells us that natural objects are most important in forming the mind of the child , and hardly any polite references are made to the curriculum at Hawkshead Grammar School and Cambridge University .
19 At this point the poet ‘ takes off ’ and in a moment of vision tells us that Man 's ‘ greatness ’ is derived from early childhood experiences — provided that we have contributed something from ourselves to the bare impressions .
20 Fighters need lots of things but not big muscles — one look at any of the lighter boxing greats tells us that .
21 On this point , the Sunday Times is once again instructive : it tells us that
22 Other evidence , such as the votive faience robes mentioned earlier , tells us that elaborate dresses were offered to deities and it is probable that statues of deities were clothed in these .
23 However , it hardly seems satisfactory to say that it is conscience which tells us that conscience should be at the controls , for presumably self love would say the same of itself if given its head .
24 The answer might seem to be that experience tells us that nation states are a key fact of the current world and that they plainly do often behave in a self-interested way .
25 He tells us that as prime Minister :
26 That 's why it 's only black people who will put an end to racism ; our whole experience tells us that .
27 In this case aggregate theory tells us that economic criteria are of prime importance in this image building .
28 The context , rather than phonological evidence , tells us that silver is given in the above example and that the new element therefore starts at needs .
29 The Book of Remembering tells us that .
30 A sundial tells us that time was important even before the Swiss started making clocks and watches .
  Next page