Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] find the " in BNC.
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1 | Usually where you find the manufacturer 's logo . |
2 | The essence of diffusionism is that where you find the same or similar techniques you propose the existence of some form of cultural connection or ‘ borrowing ’ , especially when , in the case of material objects , the similarities do not stem automatically from the raw materials used , and where they are reinforced by large numbers of parallel instances . |
3 | Women who have to leave the labour market altogether , or who find the location , hours and other opportunities for employment restricted , will inevitably experience reduced earnings . |
4 | In Judaism , where we find the same secret teachings in the Kabbalah . |
5 | But where we find the law is deliberately being ignored or flouted , inspectors will be prepared to take firm enforcement action , particularly if serious risks to health and safety are evident or where what needs to be done is not new , i.e. where existing duties have simply been replaced by new legislation . ’ |
6 | But in any event I have to say that I find the judge 's reasons unconvincing and would not be minded to follow them unless we were under an obligation so to do . |
7 | I can not deny that I find the reasoning of Wilson J. most attractive . |
8 | If we do as the Russians want and hand over all these prisoners to them whether or not the prisoners are willing to go back to Russia , we are … sending some of them to their death ; and although in war we can not , as you point out … afford to be sentimental , I confess that I find the prospect somewhat revolting , and I should expect public opinion to reflect the same feeling … |
9 | ‘ What a pity , in that case , ’ she put to him with sarcasm , ‘ that I find the idea so utterly repugnant ! ’ |
10 | So it is in the nature of the enterprise as currently understood , and the status of the produced knowledge , that I find the parallel . |
11 | So it is in the nature of the enterprise as currently understood , and the status of the produced knowledge , that I find the parallel . |
12 | ‘ I am extremely annoyed about it and I want to make it clear that I find the policies of the British National Party abhorrent . |
13 | Parts of the sequence exist elsewhere but it is only in Bratislava that you find the complete set . |
14 | It is not difficult — though may be expensive — to hire a guide for a day ( or a week ) so that you find the best snow available at each time of the day and each season , whether it has n't snowed for a week or is blizzarding as you start the day . |
15 | I hope , when Siward comes with his army , that you find the field as easy to quit as it has been to enter . ’ |
16 | Both pvc and butyl liners can be repaired quite simply once you find the hole or tear , but if it 's a small one it may be troublesome to locate . |
17 | But it is with inversion that we find the first really unfamiliar transformation . |
18 | But I do want us to realise that evil today has to be faced in a far more fundamental and crucial theatre of war : it is in the processes and ideologies of the modern world itself that we find the destructive , impersonal and heartless force of the Dark Power . |
19 | It is in the work of Michel Foucault that we find the most unrelenting offensive against historicist theories of history . |
20 | It is not until they get accepted into the Project that we find the problem emerging that perhaps senior staff are not supportive . |
21 | It is in their faith in " ordinary " people , whose qualities were far from ordinary in Wordsworth 's eyes , that we find the justification for political demands for popular power or a wider franchise . |
22 | It affected the Midland counties most of all , and it is here more than anywhere that we find the planned landscape of Georgian times . |
23 | It is in this context that we find the constant reference or allusion to ‘ sensuality ’ or the ‘ sensour ’ : an agenda for the analysis of either sculptural production or viewer-response , and in particular the question of how this description of works produced across distinct periods may be attempted . |
24 | The fact that we find the use of such predicates convenient and essential for our purposes does not prove that they are indispensable in an absolute sense : viz. that the world as a matter of logic can not be completely described without them . |
25 | Nevertheless , the intelligence that we have developed for other reasons may well ensure that we find the right answers to these questions . |
26 | However the king-emperor allowed his wife , Isabella of Portugal , in 1526 to have a chapel of Spanish and Portuguese musicians and it was among the instrumentalists of this body , which was taken over by Philip II when he became regent of Spain in 1543 , that we find the innovators : the blind organist Antonio de Cabezon ( C. 1500–1566 ) , who was one of its original members , the clavichordist Francisco de Soto ( c. 1500–1563 ) , who joined soon after , and Luis de Narváez ( d. after 1555 ) , a player of the vihuela de mano ( the Spanish lute ) who was recruited by Philip . |
27 | It is in Anglo-Norman that we find the earliest evidence of the concept of fabliau in England , and it is appropriate , therefore , that our earliest English fabliau is labelled a " " fablel " " in an Anglo-Norman rubric . |
28 | It 's tempting to stop the drama at such morally dubious moments , but it is precisely here that we find the greatest learning opportunities . |
29 | What matters is that they find the system simple to use and it certainly simplifies the practitioner 's lot . |
30 | ( Princes ) do not have the right to say that they find the books dedicated to them atrocious or that the music which they play for them scorches their ears … |