Example sentences of "we must [vb infin] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Yet we must hold on to the basic idea that science discovers the truth of how the world works .
2 Once we have incorporated the Maastricht treaty into our law — presumably , as my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister said , in the first Session of the new Parliament — we must press on in the second half of 1992 , when we have the presidency of the Community , to set out more clearly our vision of a common European future .
3 On the first point : if we want to grow we must reach out beyond the circle of friends to people who have previously had nothing to do with CPRW .
4 We must go up in the loft and find your clothes
5 For the source of this we must go back to the Pythagoreans of the sixth century BC , whose cosmological speculations were based on the ‘ tetracys ’ , that is , the geometrical symbol composed of ten discrete points symmetrically arranged in the form of an equilateral triangle with sides of four points each .
6 In order to do so we must go back to the very beginning of society , explain the original trauma and then consider what consequences it has had for modern times ; for , as we shall see in a later chapter , an inability to accept the truth about ourselves and our societies is probably the most dangerous threat to the successful solution of our present cultural crisis and is certainly the chief obstacle to progress in the sciences of man .
7 Nothing would do but we must go out on the river .
8 Using other kinds of evidence , we must move out to the localities , and the counties .
9 We must face up to the harsh fact that the present social and economic pattern of farming in the EEC can no longer be maintained .
10 We must hit back with the truth
11 If there is doubt and unbelief to be overcome , it is outside of us , and like St George we must venture out of the camp and slay the dragons for the honour of faith .
12 To define Rottweiler character , we must look back to the breed 's history .
13 First , however , we must come back to the question of how to read a contingency table when one variable can be considered a cause of the other .
14 We must get off on the right foot . ’
15 We must get back to the high standards of self-discipline that we have set ourselves in the past , ’ said Cooke .
16 ‘ Yes , we must get back to the office .
17 Certainly we must get back to the mooring in time for you to start work . ’
18 But we must get back to the Vicar , who is awaiting his final epitaph in some anxiety .
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