Example sentences of "we [verb] not [verb] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We tend not to appreciate pleasures like that unless we have had to manage without them .
2 As we did not perform endoscopy in this control group , we can not rule out the inclusion of a few patients with gastritis .
3 We did not specify lists of terms and concepts which should be taught .
4 Tesfaye Dinka , visiting London , said on April 2 that " there is no military co-operation right now " with Israel and that " we did not restore relations with Israel for military reasons " .
5 The House may be interested to know that , because we were seeking to look at the effect of NHS management reforms over the first six months , we did not draw attention to the fact that the number of people who have been waiting for more than one year on in-patient lists is 37 per cent .
6 We travelled back and forth between England and India until I was seven when , because of the First World War , we did not leave India for five idyllic years from 1915 .
7 It was as if hammers had hit us ; without a word we left , and we did not set foot in the house for many months , until Valeria announced that all was forgiven .
8 Also the specificity of our results needs to be verified as we did not study patients with other inflammatory bowel diseases .
9 Secondly , for historical reasons we did not hold records of National Insurance numbers on the payroll file ( and could not easily add them ) .
10 We did not obtain data on the families of patients with inflammatory bowel disease who died between 1978 and 1987 .
11 We did not fear death at all .
12 We did not write letters to them .
13 We did not assess travel to work in detail .
14 ‘ There is a feeling that we did not get justice off court and the players want to put things right on court , ’ said the Components Bureau coach , Bob Stokes .
15 We do not send information to your home .
16 However , he stressed in an obvious reference to Kurdish guerrillas and their supporters that " we do not give guarantees to those people " .
17 The purpose of etiquette is to provide an easy set of rules which we can follow when we are in a hurry and want to make sure that we do not give offence to anybody .
18 This is a policy of indemnity and we do not pay damages for such items .
19 ‘ When we hear such sounds we do not pay attention to things like pitch and timbre .
20 We do not waste time on abstract philosophical arguments about ‘ rights ’ .
21 We do not distinguish experiences from non-experiences as we might distinguish oranges from apples , viz. by indicating certain characteristics that might enable anyone , including those who have never tasted either fruit , to tell one from the other .
22 Given a subject , already identified , and given the wholly reasonable assumption that in our linguistic thoughts we do not equate properties with entities , there would be no conceivable point in introducing a property , and introducing it with the sense of " this completes what I am about " unless that property is to be taken as applicable to the subject .
23 Also , emotionally it is very important that we do not carry resentment towards each other .
24 We do not exercise power over explosions and crackling and snapping of fire like the strangers , we fall back into the waves — as Dulé 's mother did , the young woman I dug up all those years ago , who had been drowned , who had returned to the deep blue .
25 That we do not treat animals with at least the same respect that we treat such unfortunate human creatures is seen by the liberationists as ‘ speciesism ’ in its purest form based as it is only upon the anatomical difference .
26 However , here we do not resolve A into unc instead , we require that unc shall be a orthogonal matrix : unc Thus unc is our similar transformation of A into B. We then transform B into C : unc and so on , until the transform is eventually an upper triangular matrix having the eigenvalues of A in its diagonal .
27 We do not have a mind which is formed like theirs , we do not experience things in the way they do .
28 Otto Reinhold , an East German ideologue , reinforced this gloomy view by insisting : ‘ We do not want reform for reform 's sake , but changes which will help the further development of socialism ’ .
29 Since the base category will be used in every comparison , it is desirable that there should be a substantial number of cases in it ; we do not want comparisons to be made with an unreliable figure .
30 But it is no use making out an extensive list of the treasures in our inheritance if we do not make use of them .
  Next page