Example sentences of "we find [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 In one of the rooms we found trunks of clothes .
2 We were obliged to open a crèche because we found girls staying at home to look after the babies .
3 But in this connection it is worth noting here that we found women even more likely than men to say they would prefer to pay extra for credit insurance , against the risk of inability to repay : credit insurance is discussed in the section immediately following this .
4 In a recent study we found women with anal cancer to have a high risk of having had cervical intraepithelial neoplasia or invasive cervical cancer diagnosed previously .
5 In another experiment , with a different set of materials that were less complex overall and , therefore , more clearly sensible in all the conditions , we found effects on judgement times .
6 We have found that are very much more sensitive , for example in detecting instability , erm we found differences pressures of were much higher in ambulatory studies .
7 We found differences in the clinical signs between amyloid types .
8 I know where the body was lying , because we found bloodstains .
9 We found sensitivities of 84% and 74% for PSAP and PSA respectively .
10 At each level of the system we found claims to breadth and balance undermined by countervailing policies and practices : by Authority special projects favouring some areas at the expense of others ; in central INSET provision ; in PNP development fund allocations ; in the distribution of posts of responsibility in schools ; in school-based INSET ; in the status of postholders and the time they had to undertake their curriculum leadership responsibilities ; in the areas of the curriculum subjected to review and development ; in teacher expertise ; and above all in the quality of children 's classroom experiences .
11 We found Blacks were more disapproving than Whites , who in turn were more disapproving than Asians .
12 On the other side of the peninsula we found colonies of seals and penguins .
13 But we found forms of collaboration that were more often :
14 At El Balyana we found rooms above a tea-house on the edge of town .
15 We found indications that homophonic phrases were more of a problem than had previously been thought .
16 However , we found indications in the last chapter that this could lead to a very large number of possible word strings .
17 In Chapter 1 we found psychologists , biologists and ethologists making far-reaching claims for socially unmediated , innate drives affecting people 's lives .
18 We found traces of blood in the bathroom .
19 In our interviews we found headteachers and board members considered that boards were strongly supportive of their schools .
20 There , with names like Reichensteiner , Huxelrube , Faber and Bacchus , we find grapes better suited to our growing conditions .
21 In this , we find sections on call to worship ; confession ; praise ; reading of scripture and preaching of the word ; response to the word ; communion ; blessing .
22 In the case of the mid-seventeenth century we find groups of current historians who share social and frequently explicit political assumptions identifying themselves with right and left , and often implicitly acknowledging that their own political agendas dictate not only their naming of the past but their unhappiness with opposing critical orientations .
23 In Wordsworth 's poetry we find adults ‘ learning ’ from children , and in the Immortality Ode the child is addressed as
24 In any society , we find beliefs about language that are simply accepted as common sense .
25 But if we look at just One part of that story in detail , we find complications .
26 We find customers prefer to sit down at individual desks and discuss their requirements . ’
27 Around Ashton-under-Lyne , for example , where it was reckoned there were nearly a hundred cotton mills within a ten-mile radius — all on the river Tame or its tributaries — we find hamlets in the 1790s with the significant names of Boston , Charlestown and Botany Bay .
28 If we find changes in protein synthesis , say , in a correlative experiment , how can we be sure that such changed synthesis is not the consequence of these expressed behaviours rather than the learning which we presume accompanies them ?
29 The chief mark of that period was a new confidence in the power of reason , as opposed to acceptance of authority , to discover truth : we find things out , not simply by believing what someone else tells us , but by considering the evidence , reflecting upon it , and accepting what can ‘ prove itself at the bar of reason ’ .
30 We find things that we study yes .
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