Example sentences of "[noun sg] we [vb mod] [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Since most of the parameters here will normally be constant during a given experiment we can speak of the blackout level for a given light intensity .
2 For our third experiment we must move into the quantum world .
3 I have n't really asked you very many questions so I 'll , I 'll ask you a question which sets us up for a programme we might do in the next series , having discussed the wedding , next the honeymoon !
4 For the second part of the research we will rely on the published and unpublished material of the NMGC and on interviews with key informants .
5 In this chapter we shall deal with the major advice-giving agencies prior to a discussion of the arrangements under which the private profession and the law centres provide legal advice and assistance .
6 In the rest of this chapter we will look at the different types of weak syllable in more detail .
7 The final point I want to make Mr Deputy Speaker which I think is very , very important indeed , bearing in mind that fact that so few people bothered to vote in these is is there any possibility that before these regulations come into effect we can have at the same time , a little pamphlet put out saying exactly what these additional M E Ps and the existing ones actually can do .
8 The Primitive Methodists , whose work was mostly amongst working people , admitted with a sorrow they could not hide that ‘ the growing worldliness of men needs a faithful and independent ministry ; the increased educational facilities and the advance of science challenge us to put the best talent we can produce into the pulpit ’ .
9 We must move the debate about animals from how much harm we should inflict to the more fundamental issue of how much good we should do .
10 Existing technology is less advanced … but there is a great deal we can do within the limits of existing technology — and more we can do to spur technological advance . ’
11 3.8 A solution to these puzzles which , moreover , covers certain further data , emerges from the proposal we shall make on the interpretation of postnominal attributive adjectives : that prenominal and postnominal attributives are intensionally alike in one important respect but dissimilar in another .
12 They have been quick to protest at having their profits squeezed , but , Mackenzie concedes , ‘ it 's all the work we can get in the present market ’ .
13 From the window we could see to the right a barrel-organ with a small dog dressed as a clown , to the left a pile of rags heaped on the Métro ventilation grille .
14 We need all the help we can get from the public .
15 I had moved a table into a big window , for I foresaw that we should need all the help we could get from the view .
16 Who is God 's down payment on the inheritance we will receive in the future ?
17 We will examine each of these misconceptions in turn , so that once we have torn away these layers of misunderstanding we can get to the kernel of doubt and see not only its dangers but its value .
18 Ironically , as we come nearer home we will slip into the past tense .
19 She is the sort of girl we might meet in the pages of a Barbara Pym — , a bit of a scholar , leading a spinsterly existence in a middle-class house in an English country village .
20 It is also a question we would ask about the tomb of a knight , whose collar suggests he might have been a Lancastrian .
21 Within the European Community we will press for the introduction of integrated pollution control on the UK model .
22 There simply are such ‘ indicative ’ signs , and they are presented to us in sense-experience ; on their basis we can reason to the hidden things which they ‘ indicate ’ .
23 To discover the origins of a station in such an unlikely place we must look to the problems faced by the BCR when it began working .
24 The minimum mortgage we will advance under the service is £20,000 , but there is no maximum .
25 From any starting point we could move through the maze in such a way as to recreate the dodo , the tyrannosaur and trilobites .
26 One answer , and a point we will develop at the end of this book , is to recognise that ethology and biology may well have identified some of the most basic relationships and processes ( preservation of self and kin , territoriality , different forms of bonding between parents and children , male aggression ) underlying human behaviour .
27 At this point we can move to the case against secularism .
28 At times , of course , we know that the rate of subsidence ( and the rate of uplift ) has influenced the type of sedimentation , so the two are connected , but my general thesis remains that for the preservation of the bulk of the continental stratigraphical record we must think of the two as separate and independent phenomena .
29 It is not clear how this issue could be resolved , other than by stipulation , and hence rather than attempt to reach a conclusion we will proceed to the more fundamental question of whether the shareholders should , in the first place , be considered to have a moral right to decide how companies should be run in virtue of their ownership of corporate property .
30 We did n't go in always , we used to If we were on the top of the hill we used to watch from the top .
  Next page