Example sentences of "we [adv] [verb] [pers pn] [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We gently lowered it to the floor .
2 This part of the camp was in itself no more attractive than the part in which we lived , but the very fact that we did not live there , that we did not know every inch of its dusty ground , that normally we only saw it from the distance , gave it a charm of its own .
3 We 're the ones who you know , do n't tell anybody what our strategy is going to be , we suddenly spring it on the members right at the end of the process at the council meeting .
4 We better get you off the main streets , you 're a target … ’
5 Um well we did n't know what to do with the money , so we basically gambled it on the Grand National .
6 I remember David started crying but Ralph would not back down and say we deserved the money , or to have some of it , so we just left them at the Brummel Club before doing their thing .
7 Head seems to work fairly well it 's easily cleaned out easily fed and the cows come to calf we just put them in the pend and after that once they 're a reasonable size we put them through into a byre and it easier to work the situation once the calves are a a fair size and pass the stage especially .
8 And we just put them in the middle of the room and
9 I shut Ben in the conservatory now when I go out through the week , we just put him in the garage when we go out the weekend
10 In my maths in school we just finished them on the last day .
11 ‘ You think we just built it for the tourists ? ’
12 Lifting her out of the water we were totally silent , and neither of us seemed to be willing to commit ourselves on a weight so we just put her in the sling and let the scales do the talking .
13 We finally made it to the road and sped along towards the village in a cloud of dust , the three of us crouching low in the jeep .
14 Why do we not add them to the list of axioms given above ?
15 Well we usually change them into the same thing do n't we if we 're going to add them .
16 But we usually work it into the show format somewhere , rather than make it a part of the news .
17 A Country Diary : NORTHUMBERLAND : When we saw our first immigrant golden-eye bobbing on the waters of Bolam Lake in the early months of each year , we always took it as the first sign of spring .
18 From seven in the morning he 'd sit there with the thing pressed to his ear ; to preserve the batteries and to avoid alarming the guards , we always set it at the lowest volume .
19 That means , we all do it , we always leave it outside the
20 We still take it in the ass every morning , along with everybody else-but the whole thing 's over in a trice these days .
21 The silence — for the sound of birds and sea adds up to silence as beautifully as we ever know it in the noisy world of today — together with the sweetly moving air , and the scents of thyme and bell heather and sun-warmed bracken , all combined to distil something very potent .
22 ‘ Now the operation is commercial , we also help them with the purchasing of parts . ’
23 We keep hearing comments tonight — we also heard them in the debate before the Maastricht summit — about sovereignty .
24 Tony Soper was Nature 's early-riser and this programme suggested it is something of a habit with him , for we also saw him in the Falklands carrying out an investigation into whether the war — or was it just a conflict ? — had upset the wildlife there .
25 We probably lost them on the Beltway , and they 'd been chasing round the Virginia countryside trying to pick me up … those things only have a range of about three miles . ’
26 Our pattern will be displayed as we originally designed it in the Fair Isle option , but we are about to make some changes .
27 Do n't worry if you 've not been told , it 's very new , and the managers actually over this week and last week have been before the Group Managers effectively having the last bits of training done and workshops before we really launch it to the field .
28 When Mrs Gaskell introduces us to the Bartons ' lodging , we supposedly see it through the eyes of Mrs Barton .
29 On pain of loss of temporalities which you hold from us , we strongly inhibit you in the council now called at Lambeth from presuming to attempt anything to our prejudice , or that of our realm , or against us or our rights which our predecessors , kings of England , enjoyed by ancient and approved custom , or to assent to any such move .
30 It was a great day , and best of all we even made it on the nine , on the six o'clock news .
  Next page