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

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1 Our arguments are based not only on our national interest but on the risks we perceive to the competitive position of the Community as a whole .
2 In their two contrasting styles we return to the main theme of this chapter : boyo Neil 's communicating style emphasising ‘ commonality ’ ; and the formal prime ministerial Margaret Thatcher style emphasising ‘ control ’ .
3 The chlorine we detect in the rivers has actually come from the ocean .
4 With this broad theme in mind we turn to the subject of International Relations and then to an outline of the book .
5 In many respects we act in the shoes of solicitors and legal advisers because we have gained great experience in dealing with these matters .
6 In the New Testament we read of the insurrection under Judas and Theudas ( Acts 5:36 , 37 ) , and a further revolt under an unidentified Egyptian ( Acts 21:38 ) .
7 The report said that UNESCO had not accepted the need for budgetary restraint and was still excessively politicized , adding : " The leverage we retain as a sought-after non-member … is greater than we would wield simply by being one vote among 161 others . "
8 For musicians , the lure of the West must be strong , and for reasons as understandable as basic working conditions and standard of living , but as a result we stand at a crossroads : how can we possibly avoid the continuing standardization of orchestral , instrumental and vocal production , and continue to have the opportunity of hearing music played in a style and tradition for which it was probably originally conceived .
9 This county council has recognised that in Leicestershire we live in a society .
10 We tend to regard the Middle East as a ‘ trouble spot ’ and our understanding of the region and its culture is limited by the stereotyped images we receive through the media .
11 Well we we ca n't say o overall but we started in a very small way but on average Dennis we raise in the region of two thousand pounds a year .
12 With perfect buoyancy we lay in the current , drifting at no mean speed through the long fronds of kelp , angling our bodies to follow the curves of the bottom .
13 we , I 've had when we go down , on Thursdays we go to the sports hall sometimes if it 's wet and erm we 're to erm do things the teachers and I er , have tried a bit of basketball but I ai n't got it into
14 Also , the stereotyped aspects we recognize in a problem situation depend upon how we look , which in turn is based upon our personal belief and value systems .
15 Sometimes we come very close to the world outside , for example when we hear someone say the words we need for a piece of writing we 're involved in we commit it lovingly to memory so we can use it .
16 In this chapter we go beyond the ‘ finished product ’ which is often portrayed in the major sexual assault searches and the cases of sex murder .
17 In this chapter we concentrate on the problem of integrating geographical data reported for different areal spatial units , one of the most intractable of all data integration problems .
18 In this chapter we look at the ways to develop the applications which use the database , including an analysis of data requirements , and in Chapter 7 we look at setting up different external views in the context of different DBMS .
19 In this chapter we look at the general nature of weak syllables .
20 We have a duty , as the authority that extracts money from the taxpayer and then spends it on buying services for the taxpayer , to ensure that every pound we spend on the taxpayers ' behalf buys as much as it possibly can .
21 Newspaper , radio and television reports are intimately involved in the formation of our images of the places beyond our immediate experience , and the pictures we form of the places featured in our study are no exception .
22 Our six case-study schools whose procedures for combating truancy we report at the end , regularly monitored attendance and absentee pupils rates and were alert to ways of keeping disaffected pupils in school .
23 ‘ We have a clear groupwide strategy to establish a sound financial business with the capacity for future investment in the many exploration and development opportunities we have around the world .
24 In practice we distinguish between the external cause of a rhythm , which is caused by our life-style or environment , and another internal cause , which we might say is due to a clock within our body .
25 He also has the rather unenviable job of being the go-between between the leadership and us , which means he has to tell us any things which ‘ are not done ’ ( for example that I ill-advisedly introduced Confucius into one of my examples ) , and also has to clear any demands we make with the leadership .
26 From the Palgrave Cross at the top of Church Hill we continue down the High Street as far as Belmont — the centre of dissent — on the left .
27 First , many aspects of every action we perform for a reason are not uniquely determined by reasons .
28 In contrast , the data we have on the somatosensory cortex indicate that all of the areas specialize in some way and that there is no generalist area .
29 The data we have at the moment suggest that we should reach our targets about 80% of the time , but our aim over the years will be not only to reach the targets in a higher proportion of cases but also to make the targets more difficult .
30 These and many hundreds of other questions , views and theories are debated endlessly by us as a group until we reach a view which satisfies us that , at least on the basis of the knowledge and data we have at the moment , we have some sort of cohesiveness .
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