Example sentences of "we [adv] consider [art] " in BNC.

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1 If we just consider a single locus , the equilibrium frequency is .
2 We shall see more formally why this is the case when we discuss bonds in Chapter 6 , but it is a relationship which is easy to grasp intuitively if we just consider the position of a holder of existing bills .
3 We thus consider the effect of passing a turbulence signal through a frequency filter before the usual squaring and averaging .
4 We also consider the use of export processing zones ( EPZ ) and commercial diplomacy in regional trading blocs .
5 We also consider the areas that need further research .
6 We also consider an ‘ alternative model ’ where there is primogeniture ( and again fixed family size ) ; this is discussed later .
7 We now consider a particular case , a simple ordered overlayer surface .
8 We now consider the ‘ costs ’ to a society of a moderate inflation rate .
9 Having examined the main reasons which explain the predominance of localised , single-employer bargaining on the North American continent we now consider the case of Japan , the other major country in which collective bargaining is normally conducted on an enterprise basis rather than in the form of industry-wide agreements .
10 If we now consider the relations he posits between them we find ourselves facing a comparable problem ; although he posits numerous interconnec-tions between the components of social formations , he neither explains how he arrives at them nor describes them in any detail .
11 We now consider the forces on the cylinder as it passes through the atmosphere .
12 We now consider the estimates of distance to the SNR and the pulsar .
13 We now consider the thermal state and crustal thickness , to determine the likelihood that the trondhjemites were produced by melting of the lower crust .
14 So far , we have restricted our attention to unrepeated real roots of the characteristic equation belonging to a matrix A ; we now consider the case of two equal real roots .
15 We now consider the sector which comprises institutions other than those in the monetary sector .
16 We now consider the combined effects of increased polarization on both the WD and MD curves .
17 We now consider the effect of a tax at rate T KX on the use of capital in the X sector , affecting both marginal and fixed costs , taking for simplicity the case .
18 We now consider the concept of balanced growth incidence , where changes in taxation are accompanied by offsetting adjustments in monetary policy to hold constant the capital-labour ratio .
19 By way of contrast , we now consider the effects of taxation in the alternative model , where inheritance , and the unequal division of estates , leads to concentration of wealth .
20 We now consider the principles by which nationalized industries should be run .
21 Further discussion thus has to focus attention on particular flows , and we now consider the two-dimensional wake to exemplify the procedures and the ideas that come from them .
22 If we now consider an arbitrary kinetic unit which involves the movement of six atoms by rotation about two chain bonds , the movement can be visualized as shown diagrammatically in figure 12.3 .
23 This means we simply consider the z 1 -row as an extra constraint row and add a row for , using the formula ( 3.6a ) for ( taking to be ) .
24 We then consider the judicial response to these arrangements before examining the Interception of Communications Act 1985 , passed as a result of a decision of the European Court of Human Rights that British practice violated Article 8 of the Convention .
25 We then consider the way in which housing structure and design affect women 's lives .
26 We then consider the objectives and operation of the post-war planning system .
27 We then consider the effect of higher taxes on incentives to work , save and take risks , and on the rise of the ‘ black economy ’ .
28 We then consider the more usual problem facing us : how to test the rational expectations hypothesis when the expected variable is not directly observed or measured .
29 We again consider the general case of a TB purchased after issue and sold before maturity .
30 We therefore consider the effect of age on income as shown in the original bivariate table in figure 13.3 .
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