Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] we [art] " in BNC.

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1 Through the horse , we have emphasized for us the animalistic and instinctive nature of the male ( or human ? ) sexual appetite .
2 ( But by the way , do n't look for Michael Palin 's name in this year 's programme , even though he has come to us every ‘ odd ’ year since 1981 .
3 1 You have prepared for us the script for ten episodes of a video entitled — .
4 The hon. Gentleman has obviously recognised that the Prime Minister secured for us a major competitive advantage at Maastricht .
5 Thus , the Report refers to " English in the highest sense " as " the channel for formative culture for all English people , and the medium of the creative art by which all English writers of distinction , whether poets , historians , Philosopher , or men of science , have secured for us the power of realising some part of their own experience of life " .
6 But modern physics ( since , say , 1905 ) has presented to us a very strange picture of the world .
7 In cases where we require the client to confirm in writing certain representations made to us the following letter may be used .
8 Elonex too has raised the price on many of its machines , putting about £100 on popular desktop models and £200 on its modular notebooks featured by us a couple of issues ago .
9 Even then our marker point will have preserved for us a stability in stratigraphical nomenclature and will have saved us from the utterly wasteful vacillations in opinion and fashion that trouble us today .
10 From the architectural viewpoint the greatest importance of this site , now so excellently opened up and preserved , is that it has preserved for us a provincial Roman city at a certain point in time — A.D. 79 — so that we can see for ourselves the buildings in which such citizens of the empire lived .
11 But the thing is , also what I thought of once we got ta us a mortgage and got established , you could always remortgage and go into er like Bradford and Bingley , and come out like that
12 In his attempts to understand the paths taken by projectiles and falling bodies , he had ‘ opened to us the gate of natural philosophy universal , which is the knowledge of the nature of motion ’ .
13 Well , I suppose I do know him fairly well , he 's stayed with us a couple of times .
14 The preservation qualities of the Somerset Levels have demonstrated to us a wide range of prehistoric woodworking skills and the uses to which wood was put , not only for use in trackways ( Fig. 5 ) hurdles , and so on , but also for making artefacts .
15 We are not claiming either that He has somehow implanted in us a sixth sense that gives us certainty He exists whilst our other five senses provide no such assurance .
16 In 1910 , when the Golden Jubilee of Thomas Street was being celebrated , the Quarterly Board looked at all the work of God on the Circuit and among other things they recorded their feeling that ‘ in Edenderry there is set before us an open door and we are determined to enter in . ’
17 The court proceedings provided us with a platform ; fines and suspended sentences conferred on us an aura of minor martyrdom …
18 But having parents seemed to us a very great hindrance … .
19 But that said , erm what what it what the position is , er i is that we have put into the model Well we have n't put it into the model because it was given to us a part of the model and possibly by now North Yorkshire may have the revised model , No they have n't yet .
20 You know very often , in fact usually the best way of working things out is to go right back to the beginning is n't it , it , to start off at square one and the trouble is sometimes we want to start in the middle , we want to pick it up where we think we can come in and it does n't work that way , we 've got to go right back to the beginning , and what is it at the beginning , well we look to see how God , what God 's plan and his purpose for us is , how God made us , it tells us there in the book of Genesis in the first chapter in verse twenty seven , that God created us to be like himself and you 've got to look in the mirror and I 've got to look in the mirror , not just the glass mirror on the wall , but into the mirror of ourselves and realise we do n't have to be intellectuals , we do n't have to be astute observers , but even the very cursory of glances will show to us that were nothing like it , if God made you and me to be in his image , then something has gone wrong , but that 's how we started , that is how he made us and in making us to be like himself that does something tremendous because it gives to men and women , it gives to human kind a status and a responsibility in creation , he did not make you and me like the animals , no matter how wonderful their abilities are , they 've got tremendous instincts , they 've got tremendous homing instincts , how that tiny bird weighing , weighing less than an ounce can fly thousands and thousands of miles , for the first time and come back , six , nine months later to the very spot where it was hatched out of an nest , now you ca n't do it , I ca n't do it , but for all wonders that God has put into the , into his , to his creative to his , in , in his creation , in animals , in birds and in other creatures , he has done something that marks you and I humanity out above and beyond all his others creation , he has given to us a status and a responsibility
21 He has given to us a new name we 've take his name we belong to him .
22 It ends : ‘ Lord , cast on us a favourable eye . ’
23 William Emser has resurrected for us a brilliantly stupid comment by the eighteenth century classical scholar Bentley on these lines .
24 Mum , we have got the ten saws , last year one of the lads left with us a pair of eighty pound boots and fifty pound gaiters , left them and we do n't know who they belong
25 The Secretary of State put before us a whole catalogue of countries that have ballistic missile capability , and a substantial number of them appear to have embarked on a nuclear weapons programme .
26 Unfortunately in the recent past circumstance has forced upon us a number of changes to our Q.T. days .
27 THE death of the Dowager Duchess of Rutland has taken from us the last and most loved of our nieces ( for niece she was , although older than the present writers by five and ten years ) .
28 I believe that he has , in a single word , delivered to us the votes of the majority of general practitioners in the country , for which I am most grateful .
29 Monsieur Brisset arranged an appointment for us , and later that day Paul Ingouf , in his office , passed to us a typewritten page from the secret daily record that had been kept during the war ; listed there we saw :
30 In that context I think it would be helpful to us erm if we could have submitted to us a version of the table originally submitted by the H B F relating to commitments .
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