Example sentences of "hope [conj] [art] house " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We are strong supporters of the peace process , but I hope that the House will recognise that it will be a long and difficult road .
2 I am sure that the House — at least , I hope that the House — will join in condemning international terrorism , particularly when it is state inspired .
3 I am aware that it is not possible for me to call every Scottish Member at Scottish Question Time , but I thought that it was fair today — I hope that the House will agree — to get as far down the Order Paper as I possibily could .
4 I hope that the House will reject the Bill , but I fear that it will not .
5 I hope that the House will support the reasoned amendment , and that the whole project can be examined properly and thoroughly .
6 The terms of the motion may not be welcome to all hon. Members , but what he has to say deserves to be aired and I hope that the House will ensure that he has an opportunity to make his point today .
7 Even so , I hope that the House will forgive me if , after my speech , I am absent from the Chamber for perhaps a quarter of an hour while I go there to congratulate the winners of training awards .
8 I hope that the House will never forget that no one is guilty of an offence unless they have been duly tried and convicted and that everyone is entitled to the same presumption of innocence .
9 I hope that the House will support the motion .
10 I hope that the House will agree that the Bill deserves a Second Reading and , indeed , passage into law .
11 For all those reasons , I hope that the House will reject the idea of permanent guillotines .
12 As I 've said , these regulations are apparently complex but merely affect a simple extension of rights to vote and candidacy in conformity with our treaty obligations and I hope that the house will approve these too .
13 For these reasons , it is possible to hope that the House of Lords might , if called upon to do so , reconsider the decision in a way that makes it plain that the right to freedom of speech in public is not wholly dependent upon the discretion of the policeman on the spot — important though that will undoubtedly always be — but is guided by rules and principles that recognise , inter alia the importance of freedom of speech in public , and the fact that the person interfered with was going about his otherwise lawful business .
  Next page