Example sentences of "[conj] we [vb past] [prep] the [num ord] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This can cast us back to that sense of aestheticism and dedication that we saw in the sixth elegy .
2 I will indicate , as I go through them , the way in which they work : that is , how they fit into the diagnostic story that we developed in the last chapter .
3 The answer depends on the criteria of efficiency and equity that we developed in the last chapter .
4 I think what I 'm trying to say is , in the minutes that we produced for the last meeting , it says that a copy of it will be available for the next meeting
5 If anybody wants to comment on it , or any I think perhaps just confirm the calculation about being roughly one a day , that erm if you take the number of decisions that we made in the last twelve months , twenty one point eight percent of which were , erm , decisions to be put out by twenty six five , if we divide that by four , divide it by fifty two , and divide it by five you end up with point eight six per day , er
6 It has , not surprisingly , been at the forefront of critical enterprises which have considered literature 's different relations with history that we explored in the first chapter .
7 The only way to reverse what the hon. Gentleman alleges would be to go back to the sort of tax rates that we had under the last Labour Government — 83 and 98 per cent .
8 I 'm sure that if I was still living in England we would n't have got the push that we had on the last album and we would n't have got nominated for a Grammy .
9 The boys , both pumped up by their achievement , ran and jumped all along the road to the Land Rover that we found round the next bend , and rode back in euphoric good spirits .
10 It has gone in repaying the overseas debt that we inherited from the last Labour Government .
11 As these anthropologists chose to investigate geographically peripheral communities , so we chose in the first instance to investigate communities that are marginal in a different sense .
12 It was exciting — they were good advertisements , and we waited for the first children to come .
13 There were five barges moored abreast here , and we climbed over the first four , greeting the startled crews as we went .
14 We did all right until we got to the last bit and I got my foot caught in Otley 's pocket when he tried to bend down , he fell and flung me over his head knocking my wig skew-whiff .
15 On we went , par after par , until we got to the 16th and I thought , this must be it .
16 ‘ I would love to see how Leeds would handle the situation if we scored in the first minute , as they did at Ibrox . ’
17 If we decided through the first of these two methods , which begins with moral assessment of each individual 's record one by one , that each shareholder was indeed responsible for a share of the loss , then we might well report our conclusion in the language of personification .
18 Before we got to the first tee I could see that Jack was already on edge — or more on edge , rather , because a hangover had already eaten into his small reserves of patience and equanimity .
19 After we went through the second door , Buff stood without moving and he looked at the trees and did n't say anything .
20 I think , I think , I think on the er planning report when we went to the last planning committee when the refusal was made highways said the access was okay .
21 When we went round the first corner at about 90kph Tony went very quiet .
22 When we came to the third hole I thought we were going to need some of that cushion .
23 Yeah , and I said erm , and I said that were n't , if that was n't enough I said bearing in mind he 'd just come out of intensive care off a life support machine , I said and which I think that , that tells us that he needs a bit of extra care compared to some of them on the ward , I said I know they 're all important and I know you 're busy but I said I think you should 've had a bit of priority , he was dying , and you know he 's dying , you 'd been told , she said yes that 's right , I said but what really broke my bloody heart was from one o'clock that dinner time he sat in that chair , we left that hospital at half past eight and you assured us he 'd go to bed and when we came in the next morning at half past ten Joy he sat there exactly the bloody same , in the same filthy blanket and the same catheter on him , oh I went fucking mad and I said how dare you , I said because somebody 's told they 're dying does that mean they 've got to be forgot ?
24 The information that the Departments have presented to us on which to er respond to the consultation has n't even been very and indeed when we requested after the first round of consultation to know the existing number of lines on which they placed er their , their recommendations .
25 My nerves were really jangling when we got to the 17th , the Road Hole .
26 When we got to the 17th , the last par-5 , he hit his third shot about three feet behind the pin , but he turned to me and said , ‘ You know , Pete , I 'm so damned nervous I ca n't see the hole .
27 As we noted in the last chapter , to say that a decision or action is subject to judicial review is to say that it can be challenged on the basis of the rules and principles of public law which define the grounds of judicial review .
28 They both knew that as we walked off the 16th .
29 I patted the three tees in my pocket as we walked to the 18th tee .
30 As we skimmed along the last hundred metres , I said to the lieutenant , ‘ Tuan , have you something the boy can put over his shirt ?
  Next page