Example sentences of "we [vb mod] [vb infin] [adv] in the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I thought that it was very polite that we should go there in the evening and assess for ourselves exactly the harm th the possible harm that it could do to their gardens at the back and and that 's why we did that .
2 I rang Beryl with condolences and the suggestion that we should meet later in the week .
3 Perhaps we should advertise again in the paper .
4 We decided that this could happen with quite a few units and that we should point out in the documentation the need to be on guard against it .
5 Instead we should look directly in the place where the answer lies … the proper study of Mankind .
6 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 .
7 We must go up in the loft and find your clothes
8 It does n't matter which way we go , we 'll end up in the centre . ’
9 We 'll go up in the lift , alright ?
10 Right well I 'll start today if you do n't mind and we 'll go round in the normal way erm when we come to Pat .
11 No , he asks you to please stay for supper and we 'll go on in the morning .
12 No , he asks you to please stay for supper and we 'll go on in the morning .
13 We 'll spend the night there , and then , if she 's recovered , we 'll go on in the morning through Lima to Tacna in the south of Peru .
14 Oh well we 'll go back in the other room .
15 We 'll go down in the morning . ’
16 So we 'll decide later in the week .
17 ‘ I 'll take you to Ilse 's now and we 'll meet up in the morning . ’
18 For a start when she was talking about fish and chips she said well we 'll pop along in the car and get them from Moor Road cos they have nice er chips there but then , being as Tony had had a drink he would n't drive so
19 In terms of the papers in front of you this morning , Chair , the position is that , that is addressed over the three year period , and the figures do fluctuate between years , so there is a , as we 'll see later in the paper , there is a , a net expenditure total in year one which increases in year two , but then is offset by a , a reduction in year three .
20 We 'll get there in the end . ’
21 Maybe we 'll work together in the future . ’
22 If it were a requirement that all pupils need knowledge , skills and understanding of alienistic language and the power of language to challenge and to change experience , we might move more in the direction of a democratic society .
23 We could end up in the lunatic situation of the TDC having to pull it down to make way for a new development . ’
24 ‘ Well , we could start earlier in the morning and fit in more hours before lunchtime .
25 We 'd sit around in the evening , Dad in his chair , he had the comfortable one , and we 'd say to him , tell us about Disneyland , and he 'd chew on his pipe and be all embarrassed and smile , and we felt like a family .
26 And we 'd sit there in the car for an hour or so , chatting through what we were trying to do .
27 Finally in this short resumé of the teachers ' predicament , we should mention the more personal factors to which we shall return later in the book : their aspirations , ambitions , values and concerns .
28 ( vi ) On unc the relation R defined by ( a , b ) R ( c , d ) iff ad = bc is an equivalence relation of a kind which we shall meet again in the proof of 3.10.3 .
29 We shall argue later in the book that the information processing capability of new technology may undermine many of the reasons why large firms came into being .
30 Saussure speaks of semiology ( 1974 : 16 ) as a ‘ science that studies the life of signs within society ’ , a science of which we shall hear more in the chapter on modern French structuralism .
  Next page