Example sentences of "we [vb base] [adv] [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 So what are your plans in the next year or two as we head up towards the next winter Olympics ?
2 In this book we focus solely on a third set of questions : What impact is the new technology having on people at work ?
3 We hope that you will continue to provide us with this vital information as we embark together on the second piloting year .
4 We wish those who worked on the interim advisory committee well and we look forward to the next phase in the determination of teachers ' pay which is the work of the pay review body under the chairmanship of Sir Graham Day .
5 congratulations to the whole cast — we look forward to the next offering from the Black Friars .
6 John Howard , acutely aware of such slippage , argued that good staff and external vigilance were essential if reform efforts were to be sustained , but this view , as we look back over the last two centuries , may have been unduly optimistic .
7 And it 's also important that we look back over the last ten years to how the N H S has been fundamentally changed as a consequence of Tory government policy towards it .
8 As an example , we begin below with the fourth group E , A , D , G , then include C and F , and then move on to F , B♭ , E♭ , and A♭ , finally reversing the process to return to E , A , D and G :
9 But , thanks to the kindness of a lady in the petrol depot who agreed to phone our host when a delivery was about to be made and where , we eventually refuelled at about 9.00 am on Thursday we set out on the last leg of our journey .
10 So we set off for a last look round .
11 Refreshed , and filled once again with energy we set off for the second time that day .
12 Malc 's parents moved into our house to look after Lee and Max and loaded with amps , speakers and suitcases , we set off for the first of twelve gigs — a Sunday lunch , one spot , fourteen quid — money for old rope .
13 After a quick breakfast we set off to the first address on the list .
14 Then at Dunkirk we set off on the first 400-mile stage to our overnight stop at Vandanesse .
15 Ladies and gentlemen , we just before we get on with the second part of the meeting when erm , meeting erm I think I ought to tell you that erm one of our committee members died a very short while back .
16 and I do n't know if we want to agree to that straightaway in which case we get on to the next item .
17 We have n't got enough Nice to get some work started on the eighth floor because of the different activities But then again with the activities that are carrying on on the seventh floor we ca n't By the time we get round to the ninth pretty desperate .
18 because we get back to the first chapter , verse nine .
19 . In the case where and , which we use particularly in the next section .
20 We turn now to the second example of the way in which rational expectations introduces restrictions which can be tested .
21 We turn now to the third of the imperatives that shape the bargaining climate : the political context .
22 Now we go on to the second one .
23 I will give back give back the books that have been signed and I want you in the the section of I just want to point out one or two things before we go on to the next .
24 And then for the third leg of our erm Radio Oxford yankee , we go over in the tenth race , the nine forty eight .
25 If we go back to the first few minutes , or maybe even the first few seconds , there must have been an incredibly high density of matter near that point ?
26 We go out on the last night , ’ said Rodney .
27 We divide throughout by the last element to obtain as our new starting column unc then the iterations , using ( 3 ) at each step , begin unc We postmultiply A ( ignoring its top row ) by the column ( 4 ) to get the column of three numbers on the right ; divide by the last element to get the bottom three elements in the next column , and find the top element from ( 3 ) .
28 For the time being , we move on to the second of our theoretical perspectives , the ethogenic approach .
29 As we move on to the fifteenth century , it is hard to judge the extent or the severity of individual outbreaks of plague or of other diseases , but it is probable that some of the epidemics which occurred in urban centres , where plague was most common , were on a sufficient scale to outweigh any natural increase in the population .
30 ‘ No one has any more to say on that point , so I suggest we move on to the next one . ’
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