Example sentences of "we [am/are] [verb] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In the 1990s , again we are jumping to a new technology — object-oriented programming — as the answer to developing and delivering quality software on time .
2 And for this reason we are looking for a suitable name .
3 So we are looking for a new name that we shall use for the discs when they are eventually released .
4 Mary Anne who has been managing this side of things for us is leaving Birmingham and we are looking for a new manager ( see job description on page 6 ) .
5 We are looking for a new partnership with the LAS and believe that together it is possible to ensure this vital lifeline goes from being the worst in the UK to being the model service . ’
6 We are looking for a new custodian of the Society 's money .
7 Joan Daniels ' term of office expires at the 1987 Annual General Meeting , so we are looking for a new treasurer .
8 We are looking for a brutal , unfeeling killer . ’
9 We are looking for a sufficient cause or reason for the legal enforcement of a promise .
10 right so if you er draw a make sure you have got at least half a page , right , you are going to be drawing two quite familiar diagrams , right , you er , first of all just draw a normal total product curve , what we are going to do , because we are looking at a fixed level of output , sorry fixed level of capital what we are going to be analysing is the relationships between the total product of labour , the average product of labour , and the marginal product of labour , right , for a given level of capital okay , so the total product curve just tells us what happens to output as we increase the level of our variable factor labour keeping capital fixed at some constant constant level
11 and i if , I mean i if you take 's argument , if you take 's argument , they are all to do with , with provinces in the south and , and the argument is that here we have , we are looking at a commercialized viable economy and both and and for example are all arguing really that landlordism is not the problem the problem is that you , you , you , you you need to go further in terms of commercialization and that that , and that 's the way to go .
12 So when we look at Paul as he writes about himself , we are looking at a Christian man whose life and words have parallels for each one of us .
13 Okay , now that result holds , right , for all erm for all marginal relationships Okay , so if we are looking at a marginal marginal cost curve , right , we have got that 's our marginal cost , that 's our average cost we , we 're intersecting here when in the case it is a minimum so marginal costs cuts through average costs at its minimum value we are looking at average revenue and marginal revenue average revenue function marginal revenue function This is our total revenue function and the same relationship is embodied there , but , notice that between the average and the average revenue and marginal revenue functions , right , do n't intersect simply because we have got a linear relationship here right , average revenue is always above marginal revenue in this particular case .
14 Asked what was in the fresh package , she said repeatedly : ‘ We are looking at a whole range of options which will help unemployed people , in particular long-term unemployed , to keep in touch with the workplace , keep their skills updated and use their time more productively than some of the rules and regulations currently allow . ’
15 That we can not make those leaps of vision so because we are bound to a cultural view which denies their possibility . ’
16 We are calling for a one-day strike next Thursday in the school of food and consumer studies in the first instance .
17 There is no future in raising subscriptions to a point where we are faced with a genuine reluctance , and in some cases a real inability , to pay .
18 In turning to trusts we are faced with a similar problem , and similarly desperate evidence .
19 At a time when Europe is moving ever closer towards economic union we are faced with a stark choice of either improving our economic performance or watching the UK become a marginalised and minor economic player .
20 We are faced with a moral choice : do we allow our youngsters to be exploited ?
21 On our first call , from a dreadlocked Rastaman , we are faced with a clapped-out Mini Clubman .
22 The British legal system is already in a bit of a sorry state but this is only part of the story because we are faced with a creaking Government bureaucracy that has often been shown by the Higher Courts to be acting in an illegal and unfair manner .
23 So we are faced with a fundamental problem .
24 But we are faced with a cultural problem where descriptive work goes unrewarded , and systematics and taxonomy are often treated as one .
25 When we buy something that has been imported we are engaged in a typical economic transnational practice .
26 When we are influenced to vote or support a cause by those whose interests are transnational we are engaged in a typical political transnational practice .
27 When we experience the need for a global product we are engaged in a typical cultural-ideological transnational practice .
28 Here I just want to concentrate on what may be required if we are to shift to a different mode of argumentation .
29 Ten years after the discovery of AIDS we are entering into a new era in the global pandemic , with growing concern about our ability to confront it successfully .
30 It is essential that RBGE continues to co-operate with these bodies , and that we are represented at a high level in those international bodies which are active in taxonomic database work
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