Example sentences of "brings we [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 We are committed and open to each other in a way which brings us under the influence of the other 's ethics and direction in life .
2 First and foremost he brings us into an entirely new dimension of freedom .
3 Independence of course demands economic means : and this brings us to a last and equally basic issue .
4 This brings us to a second set of determinants of transmission teaching — those rooted in the situational constraints of the classroom .
5 A wild stylistic change brings us to a serious celebration by the London Gabrieli Brass Ensemble directed by Christopher Larkin of ‘ Original Nineteenth-Century Music for Brass ’ .
6 This brings us to a consideration of whether these programmes are capable of suggesting appropriate remedies .
7 She brings us to a town where the sky is full of burning , the old synagogue about to be engulfed ; white doves wheel round the rooftops , beat their wings , drive off the flames .
8 This brings us to the ‘ Catch 22 ’ situation that we , as designer , find ourselves in with regard to conservation bodies .
9 Which brings us to the next item , the String Quartet No 1 by Srul Irving Glick ( born 1934 ) .
10 Which brings us to the blockbusting Italy issue arranged by Morgan Stanley , the US investment bank which put together the first US-style issue in Europe with an offering for New Zealand in August .
11 This brings us to the second proposition , which was evidently begotten of inability to answer that difficult , because inherently unanswerable , question .
12 All of which brings us to the text editor .
13 The application to the wider community brings us to the purpose of our gathering in this place dedicated to unity .
14 After the events of chapter 26 he brings us to the time when Isaac is nearing death , and to the point when the blessing of the eldest son must be given .
15 This brings us to the question central to the understanding of Queen Mary : the nature of Scottish monarchy , and the factors which made the relationship between kings and their subjects successful or unsuccessful .
16 This brings us to the question of those notoriously stuffy announcers .
17 This brings us to the last perspective which has influenced us : the study , in the broadest sense , of personality .
18 This brings us to the second stimulus to the citizenship idea .
19 This brings us to the relationship between citizenship and community .
20 This brings us to the second of my three questions .
21 And this brings us to the end of our clockwise tour of Thrush Green and our brief meetings with the chief inhabitants .
22 This brings us to the final , and possibly the most important aspect in healing : empathy between healer and recipient .
23 This brings us to the Third Period , which started with the very first human emotions which heralded the dawn of civilisation .
24 This brings us to the question of how we should consider that portion of the surplus-value which is unproductively consumed .
25 Which in turn brings us to the most remarkable fact of all , namely that so far from corroborating the police 's recent claims , the witnesses they located and interviewed at the time signally failed to mention any suspicious behaviour whatsoever .
26 This brings us to the subject of heat convection and heat loss .
27 This concept of the division of our mental attributes into two quite separate aspects brings us to the frontiers of the fourth plane of our being , the spiritual level or plane .
28 Which brings us to the Woman Problem .
29 The weakness of glass fibres brings us to the question of Griffith cracks and it also brings us back to Professor Inglis , whom we left in Chapter 2 worrying about why ships broke in two at sea when simple calculation showed them to be amply strong enough .
30 Which brings us to the 1991 Rover 800 Series .
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