Example sentences of "[that] we [vb base] [conj] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 This water is not only derived from the food that we eat and the fluid that we drink : much of it comes from the multitude of secretions which enter the gut lumen .
2 We therefore add a supplement so that we know that the horse is definitely receiving vital micro nutrients ( these are nutrients required in very small quantities ) .
3 That we know because the room was cleaned at lunch-time and the cleaner actually switched on the light to help her see the condition of the table she was polishing . ’
4 Subsequently The Sports Council have offered a very generous grant providing we appoint a National Development Officer ( which has already been done ) and that we show that the Society is growing — not only by increased numbers of participants but particularly in Membership .
5 That all means that we pretend that the pound is worth what it is not .
6 The Government 's emphasis is on practical measures , on changes that will work to improve the hours that we sit and the effectiveness of parliamentary procedure .
7 Could I also say one thing finally , and that is the fact that we 've tried to run together the alteration and the greenbelt local plan as concurrently er as possible , er it would appear that the timing erm is coming together reasonably satisfactorily erm in that we hope that the report from the greenbelt local plan enquiry , is not to er far distant , erm and we would expect , sir , that you will be reporting on the proceedings at this examination in public er in the not to distant future , well I think I did give an undertaking at the greenbelt local plan enquiry that the County Council , because the two are er interrelated to a degree , that I would expect the County Council would not wish to pursue either report er until er the other er is available , and that seems to the County Council to be entirely sensible , that the two reports , the structure plan alteration and the greenbelt local plan enquiry , erm should be looked at together .
8 I note what the hon. Gentleman says , but I have to make the point that it will not be possible to keep any design capability , any warship-building capability or any manufacturing capability for the sort of defence components that we need unless the Government are prepared to fund the defence programme at a sensible level .
9 But it 's it 's information that we need or the director general need in order to decide what prices will be set .
10 Let's talk about the Channel that we want and the television we would like to see .
11 The assumption is that there is only one possible explanation of our saying this : namely , that we believe that the man 's utterance is the result of encoding something that exists at a pre-linguistic level , namely a thought , and that in the case of the parrot there is nothing at this level .
12 I have made it clear to the right hon. Gentleman and to the House that we believe that the Union between the United Kingdom and Scotland is important .
13 Nineteen ninety three is gon na be the first year in which the full benefits of this cost cutting are gon na come through and whilst it 's always a continuing process and there will be some further redundancies , I am glad to say that we believe that the bulk of the redundancies are now behind us .
14 Now that we understand that the axis of the earth has moved significantly , we realize that today 's stargazers see a different sky from their predecessors .
15 The white paper that was published some months ago indicates I think , very clearly , the kind of commitments that we have and the way in which we are meeting those commitments .
16 The crucial difference between a social democratic view of the state and the one taken here , is that we recognise that the bureaucracy itself is political in the course of exercising its executive powers , particularly in the realm of policy-making at the upper levels and in implementation at the lower levels .
17 We are not here simply in response to what has been described as the ’ West Lothian question ’ in deference to my hon. Friend the Member for Linlithgow ( Mr. Dalyell ) , When we arrive to take up our seats in the House of Commons , we are obviously strongly influenced by the constituency that we represent and the part of the country from which we come .
18 It may appear that we consider that every problem with a legal component requires legal assistance , for we have not proposed any other criterion for the provision of legal services than that a legal problem exists .
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