Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] we have just " in BNC.

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1 Then I 'll turn to you , Frank , and say , ‘ Lord Boddy , what do you think of the experiment we have just seen ?
2 ‘ Trevor Newsom , ’ said Derek Carlisle , ‘ is now on Luctia , having just arrived from Vasca where he earlier recorded the interview we have just seen . ’
3 However , the conception we have just been briefly outlining came up against a number of philosophical difficulties .
4 Indeed , many exercise tapes or aerobics sessions contain muscle-strengthening exercises of the sort we have just described .
5 ‘ I deduce the corpse we have just seen does not belong to James IV .
6 In the summer we can go out and draw from direct observation , but in winter it is too cold , but when we get back to the classroom we can draw from memory the tree we have just examined and put down on paper as much as we have learned and remembered about the tree , its form , its colour , and its texture .
7 Between these calls to NEW , we link the variable we have just gotten to the previous one to form a dynamic data structure
8 The woman we have just described is 30 lb ( 13.6 kg ) overweight and she should be delighted if she can be rid of this in around a year .
9 The Titfords , as we know only too well , were very far from being rich and powerful tycoons ; nevertheless , the trend we have just outlined was at work in a much more modest way even in their fortunes as time went by .
10 Imagine that the incident we have just described is repeated on a significant scale .
11 I think erm , the address we have just heard is a most valuable contribution to the series of the Sir George lectures , and I 'm delighted that you were available and you were willing to do this .
12 What is the relationship between the term k in that version and the term V in the version we have just looked at ?
13 In the situation we have just depicted , there is no majority voting equilibrium : there is no decision that can win a majority against all other options .
14 Now follow the first backwards pointer ( i.e. back to the node we have just come from , e.g. from the ‘ c ’ node back to the ‘ d ’ node ) , and take the next route forwards again ( to the ‘ l ’ node , giving another complete candidate string ljadl ) .
15 But although God does have the role in Berkeley 's philosophy of accounting for the continued perceivability of real objects apart from our actual perception of them , it is not quite in the way we have just described .
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