Example sentences of "we [vb mod] [verb] [that] [det] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The idea is that we may know that some pleasures or pains have a generally high or low degree of purity or fecundity without its being practicable on a particular occasion to specify and evaluate specifically the precise further pleasures or pains which are likely to ensue from them .
2 When the house of childhood does not serve as a place of support and nurture , when there is intense conflict between different members of the household , then we may find that many memories of indoors have been suppressed .
3 Moreover , before we speak of the transfer of powers , we should remember that these men were not nineteenth-century constitutional lawyers , any more than they were eleventh-century papal reformers .
4 We must ensure that such movements are not given the opportunity to develop in our own country .
5 Before we rush into changes to the homicide law , we must ensure that such changes do not do more harm than good .
6 We must ensure that those problems in the south-east are addressed .
7 We must demand that these laws be abolished because if this government has its way , the working man will have gone back one hundred years .
8 So if we must accept that these climbers , or danglers , are kings of the mountains , then who comes next in this rigid pecking order ?
9 Naturally , these predators must have turned their attentions to other animals , like the mammal-like reptiles ; but we must remember that these animals were small .
10 Again , we must remember that those sermons which got into print or were noticed and attacked in newspapers were not always typical : the typical is seldom noticed .
11 We must see that more goods are forthcoming to meet the new demand .
12 McTaggart can not accept this Humean view because he can discover no relation between mental states which could determine the bundle to which they belong other than one through the self : ‘ We must say that those states , and those only , which are states of the same self form the bundle of parts of that self . ’
13 We might think that any differences reflected poorer performance but it may just be that they merely reflect the different impact of specific price changes on drugs compared with books .
14 Given that notion , we might hold that most sentences , when true , are made true by a combination of what they mean and how the world is .
15 Naively , then , we might suppose that all bodies of water throughout the world would be evenly packed with living things .
16 Paradoxically , we might note that these services were responsible for a major portion of expenditure of the Metropolitan Authorities and the rises in expenditure incurred through policy of central Government were used as one of the rationales for dismantling these Authorities .
17 If , for example , we were to find the same results in the Social Attitudes Survey in the year 2006 , we could assume that these results are conditional upon age .
18 Following Hill we shall show that all estimates must lie within these bounds .
19 We shall insist that these events do not constitute part of the text ( though they may form part of the relevant context , cf.
20 ( Internal languages need not have formal features like those characteristic of spoken languages : we shall see that some representations hypothesized in AI are very different from verbal or mathematical strings . )
21 In 3 we shall see that these links are neither necessary nor sufficient to account for our sense of the unity of discourse .
22 If we analyse what is involved in acts of " re-identification " , we shall find that such acts are based , and depend entirely , on the occurrence of certain similar or similarly connected perceptions .
23 When , in Chapter 8 , we reach what one might have hoped was , so to speak , the basement , we shall find that some arguments about the nature of role-play lead back up to the previous layer .
24 On the other side of the coin , we would expect that those features of the Creole which ( a ) are salient and ( b ) do not present the speaker with any special difficulties of the sort involved in /r/-insertion , will be successfully imitated most of the time .
25 Now only some fifteen or twenty years later we would know that both partners in a marriage are likely to have important careers , and may well have decided that neither one of the two should be the ‘ lead operation ’ .
26 We would argue that these positions which tie socialist politics to the success of a programme of ‘ industrial regeneration ’ are not a viable basis for socialist strategy .
27 We would note that many languages have , in addition to the three basic sentence-types mentioned above , others that appear to be similarly circumscribed in use : exclamatives that are used paradigmatically to express surprise , imprecatives to curse , optatives to express a wish , and so on ( again , see Sadock & Zwicky , in press ) .
28 We will suggest that these functions are still performed to an impressive and significant degree .
29 We will ensure that all tiers of regional and local government publish a ‘ Charter of Services ’ , giving citizens clear rights to standards of service , and remedies if these are not met .
30 We will ensure that all parts of government adopt a strategic approach to the employment and development of women staff .
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