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

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1 In all such cases we will not be responsible for any costs involved .
2 In such cases we will do our utmost to help you and keep you fully informed .
3 In such cases we expect the duration to increase if the intervention is being effective .
4 In such cases we consult the veterinary experts .
5 Hence in such cases we can not expect the twin goals to be met ; in fact it may be that some compromise position has to be reached .
6 In such cases we have a notion of a whole which is more , at least phenomenologically , than a mere assemblage of parts .
7 I n such cases we say that there is a quasi-relationship .
8 As an example of such effects we consider stratified flows , which have received particular attention because of their meteorological applications .
9 But to be able to distinguish the action as a meaningful element in a system of such elements we must be able to represent its valeur .
10 If more magazines published such articles we could learn from others ' experiences and take steps to help all victims of this eternal triangle .
11 It seems to be a matter of ordinary experience that in such circumstances we do accept the psychological fact as sufficient reason for making a choice and for retrospectively judging it right or wrong .
12 Under such circumstances we say that the head encapsulates the meaning of the dependent item .
13 As Simmel notes , in such circumstances we merely ‘ lose ourselves ’ in the object , and no consciousness is generated by the relationship .
14 In such circumstances we reject the contentions advanced on behalf of the appellant on this first ground of appeal .
15 In such circumstances we may not describe a band as being due to a single local mode , and the empirical methods we have used so far break down .
16 There may be a dispute over the amount of settlement and in such circumstances we should pay what we believe represents ‘ indemnity ’ whilst continuing any dialogue with the policyholder .
17 In such areas we discover a whole lived ‘ colouring ’ , and a wide area of actual social practice , which are culturally specific and thus analytically indispensable .
18 I was at a day school in Hampstead , King Alfred School , in its heyday , and we went out to Golders Green and boarded the open top of a No. 13 bus and sat on it till it came back to Golders Green again — such sights we saw !
19 But by listing such possibilities we can already see how Bédier 's definition may be serviceable in structuring discussion : identifying a set of three basic traits of the fabliau , each of which may be elaborated upon to produce an informative description of the subject , fabliaux .
20 Biblical poetry in general is overwhelmingly composed of couplets ( or triplets , extended couplets ) , and of such couplets we could state that they are of one sort ( A is related to B ) or of a hundred , but not of three or four or five .
21 Such ideas we take to form the basis for an adequate sociological model , alongside which we seek to propose our inside account .
22 However , when we advocate such conditions we are assured that they are ‘ not economic ’ .
23 In the course of solving such problems we will frequently wish to alter upper bounds and to impose and alter lower bounds on variables .
24 It would be more accurate to say that although we do not have a right to such things we do have freedom to do them .
25 ‘ When we hear such sounds we do not pay attention to things like pitch and timbre .
26 In such epidemics we tried to get people to boil their water and to eat their food hot from the rice and curry pots , but it was rare for cholera victims to recover .
27 For such customers we have listed the properties of the most popular Matroc materials .
28 To be free of such fears we need to let God 's love drive that fear out .
29 However , without such provisions we run the risk of indiscriminately suppressing all ‘ criminal ’ expression .
30 In such ways we learned to care for people 's bodies and homes as well as for their inner spiritual life .
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