Example sentences of "[noun] we [verb] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 At Frinton we played a one-armed bandit for two whole clattering hours and never attained three fruits in a row — but did we mope ?
2 With the larger numbers to be attained , attempts will be made to correlate our findings with various clinical features and environmental factors , to analyse the meaning of the association we described the present study .
3 In this first of a series of articles designed to make you more aware of your Association we outline the overall structure of the IBOA .
4 In our thinking we follow the Perceptual maps of the world that we build up in our minds .
5 Just to be on the safe side we had a long rope attached to the raft and tied round a tree on the bank so that if the Indians lost control the rope would pull it to a stop .
6 On the west side we felt the full force of the wind which was by then force five to six .
7 When we finished our chat and tried to re-enter the auditorium we found the double doors were tight shut and we were locked out .
8 On Tuesday we had a first-class Budget , a Budget for recovery .
9 Farther down the coast we saw a huge kittiwake colony on an inland cliff and went to investigate .
10 Sometimes when we project into the future we have a reasonable expectation , based on experience , of what will happen .
11 In Lewis Carroll 's Alice in Wonderland we encounter a large cat , lying on the hearth and grinning from ear to ear .
12 Okay you 're absolutely right er we did play that at the beginning of the programme we had a little trouble with our C D what happened there Stuart it went off the air did n't it ?
13 After the programme we exchanged a few words , but he had to dash off to another engagement .
14 TALKING of questionnaires we received a curious release about a job appointment at the National Westminister Bank at Middlesbrough .
15 On arrival at the racecourse we found the large Hermès marquee to seat 1200 for a charity luncheon , surrounded by the Hermès village .
16 If we examine the lexical units referring to other modes of perception we find the following correspondences :
17 Yeah , that 's right income , income elastic manufactured goods , as a result manufactured erm sectors will be growth sectors simply bec , because as income per capita rises , people spend proportionately more of their increased income on manufactured goods and as a result we witness a marked increase in trade in manufactures .
18 Finally we give in and rent the movie we ignored a few months ago when we went to see Midnight Run .
19 That 's why on the new album we did the ambient song and the dub reggae number .
20 Little explicit literary evidence confirms this view of the Council ; there is for instance nothing in the pamphlet we call the Old Oligarch , written in c.425 , although in other contexts it does comment on the influence at Athens enjoyed by the wealthy and well-born .
21 I have a particular interest in South Africa 's erm foreign policy and one of the , from the past , one of the things that South African decision makers have said to me , our dilemma is we do not know what American policy is because if we listen to the Pentagon we get a different voice coming out than if we listen to , let us say , congressional members who are visiting from the committee of foreign affairs .
22 Through the verbal and non-verbal signals of informal or friendship relationships we acquire the social props to our identity .
23 Even if we tabulate only those time-words and their associated tempos for the movements where there is unequivocal evidence for such tempos , in H400D and the two Strasbourg motets that is without relying on those movements calculated by reference to tempo relationships we see a remarkable degree of unanimity .
24 In this chapter we analyse the nationalized industries , explain how they have been run , and assess their performance .
25 In the previous chapter we identified the major variables which influence the current account of the balance of payments and examined how automatic and discretionary adjustments operate to rectify payments imbalances .
26 In the course of one chapter we find the following phrases , in this order : there seems no explanation on Darwinian grounds It is no easier to explain It is hard to understand It is not easy to understand It is equally difficult to explain I do not find it easy to comprehend I do not find it easy to see …
27 In this chapter we consider the following issues : different types of bonds , the fair pricing of bonds , different yield measures , different yield curves ( or term structures of interest rates ) , various theories underlying the yield curve , fitting the yield curve , and different measures of the interest rate risk , e.g. duration and convexity .
28 In this chapter we consider the special problems of mentally disordered offenders , problem drinkers , drug misusers and homeless people with mental disorder .
29 In the last chapter we introduced the free-rider problem when discussing why bribes and compensation for externalities might not occur .
30 Earlier in the chapter we outlined the various views on the relationship of gospel to culture .
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