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

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1 So , the businessman goes across the road to the people running the schools , and says , ‘ These are the jobs we want filled , if you can teach the children these skills we will give them priority if they come to us for a job when they leave . ’
2 In some circumstances , because of the nature of the fault , this may not be possible , but in these cases we undertake to restore your supply within 72 hours .
3 We know that in these cases we often do face a real choice of evils and we have to find some way of deciding which of these evils is the worst .
4 In all these cases we have supplied explanatory or factual material within square brackets : ( We have also supplied headings and subheadings ( Nietzsche provides none ) , likewise within square brackets .
5 In these cases we are instructed to refer to the Adjudication Officer for a decision on whether the claim to benefit should be allowed or disallowed .
6 Given these definitions we can ask , more specifically , just what motion of a point produces a straight line , and what a circular ; what motion of a straight line produces a square , and what motion of a circle produces a sphere .
7 During these meetings we must have a serious look at whether the children should be coming home to live with you in the future .
8 One of the strangest of these rituals we were to witness only by chance .
9 Some of these rituals we still practise today , though their meaning is only dimly remembered .
10 Taking the smallest of these values we could find the value of R5 that will produce a current of 93µA to the base of TR2 .
11 If we substitue these values we get
12 In order to reveal these foundations we must therefore examine the main tenets of conservative and liberal political thought .
13 ii Example of a resident 's day 8 — 10.30 am Rise when awake assisted to dress/with personal hygiene assisted with breakfast 11– 12 noon group activities newspaper groups music/movement plan afternoon outings etc 12.00 — 12.30 Set tables for dinner 12.30 — 1.30 Lunch/assist with dishes 1.30– 2.00 Quiet period — neighbours 2.00– 3.15 Small group activities outings using mini bus Hairdressing games/quiz walks 3.15– 4.45 tea and relaxation 4.45– 6.00 set tables , Supper and dishwashing 6.00– 7.00 news/informal period 7.00– 9.00 Structured evenings can include : singsong videos bingo outside entertainers come in Drinks served at 8 pm Summary In all these activities we attempt to restore some choices to our residents , and having assessed each one individually before and after admission to the home , we can tailor each programme/activity to the individual strengths of our residents .
14 In these programmes we 're talking with people in the community who have particular contacts with us , and Graham Mayhew , who is my guest today , is a particularly good example of somebody who has contact with us at all sorts of different levels .
15 so there you , you get on the accounts you get a , a er , apparently , income er extension of the scheme budget by nearly four thousand pounds , three , eight , then you go back with what Lord was asking you about and I just want you to explain it if you can , if you ca n't tell me , as he drew your attention to surplus per audited account at August ninety nineteen one , a hundred and eight , eighty , so that , in fact the year ending nineteen ninety two , along these accounts we 're dealing with , in fact the expenditure of exceeded budget by nearly four thousand , the previous year er in nineteen ninety one er it had gone the other way that er
16 Well also just my experience , my own experience with the developments of and the evolution of the policies in Kuwait coming at working at Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research , there were many erm studies conducted at Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research and the other institute , The Social erm Political Institute , and they were the main of that was the probe through all these policies and through these institutions we have in Kuwait and try to improve it to a standard that the Kuwaiti people and the neighbouring country can benefit from at that .
17 For these reasons we shall drop references to the separation of science and religion during the scientific revolution .
18 For both these reasons we need to think not in terms of individual possible worlds but of groups of possible worlds , all worlds in a group being equally close to or distant from the actual one .
19 For these reasons we are satisfied that the Act of 1990 does not affect the situation in any way .
20 For these reasons we are currently unable to use your suggestion .
21 For these reasons we intend to perform future studies on DNA fragments containing isolated actinomycin binding sites .
22 these proposals we regard as doing no more than initiating a programme of family welfare which will have to be kept under continuous review and modified and expanded in the light of experience and deeper knowledge .
23 " In addition to these proposals we should recognize that our economic strength depends upon being competitive in world markets .
24 Among these operations we can distinguish several examples of data transfer operations , such as loading and storing the accumulator .
25 In all of these discussions we have been talking about lifeforms as physical entities — creatures who , like ourselves , have bodies .
26 On to these pictures we attach behavioural predictions — attractive people are more able , but attractive women are perceived ( by men ) to be less intelligent ; fat people are lazy or jolly ; people whose eyes are close together are dishonest ; and so on .
27 During these months we found that we were part of what amounts to a movement in Britain today , with churches springing up everywhere .
28 In a move to achieve these goals we have merged two factory units into one . ’
29 To isolate these sequences we used the enzyme T 4 DNA polymerase which has been shown to enable the isolation of telomeres with virtually no loss of telomeric DNA ( 30 ) .
30 The slow , deliberate verse movement ; the invocation of such abstractions as ‘ fortitude and patient chear ’ ; the careful avoidance of metaphorical expressions ; the weight of moral earnestness ; the balancing of word against word , of phrase against phrase , of the first half against the second half of the poem — in listing these characteristics we move back fifty years .
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