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

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1 Can I make a suggestion then that on this we change the suggested If you just put down that the enquiry form is farmed by the researchers full stop , and leave any related documents entirely up to the discretion of each and
2 From this we put a major explanatory weight on the indigenous construction of human nature and emotions .
3 Yet if we do this we undermine the whole concept of cultural evolution and the spontaneous order which underlies Hayek and Friedmans ' defence of the market economy .
4 Following this we have the long period of isostatic emergence , rapid weathering of the new mountains with the formation of molasse-type deposits , widespread red bed sedimentation and also perhaps a period of glaciation , before peneplanation , widespread marine transgressions and the recommencement of the cycle in new troughs .
5 ‘ In all this we see the very bedrock of our constitution beginning to quake …
6 For this we need the three resources of mapwork , fieldwork and archive work , blended with intuition .
7 The second step is to obtain C. For this we select the underlined element in B an evaluate in succession unc and then unc Note that the zero elements in B have become nonzero in C ; however , unc is now 2.19132 ; compare unc above .
8 The Prison Service is in this business of when things go wrong we have a full enquiry to learn the lessons .
9 So it is clear we have a long way to go before we can store up all the experiences of humankind .
10 In his notebooks of 1867 we find an extraordinary profusion of plans for a book : one or two are lists of wide-ranging topics arranged to form a more or less coherent whole ; most are variations on the theme of tragedy .
11 In Section 2 we cover the personal qualities that are evident in visionary leaders and successful change makers .
12 In ex. 2 we have a simple pentatonic idea repeated chromatically , ascending and descending up the fretboard .
13 In Part 2 we have a special guest .
14 Tomorrow night on Central we begin a two-part report on a murder that 's still a mystery … ten years after it was committed .
15 In Chapters 2 to 10 we take the various constructions in which English adjectives actually appear , and consider the grammatical and interpretative consequences of the intensional patterns which are expressed by those constructions , before returning in the final three chapters to more general issues of syntax .
16 Howev it 's all too convenient and it 's all too easy we have a perfect example of of of bureaucratic shuffling .
17 17.23 We propose the following attainment targets .
18 ‘ In the tackle and in the loose he was quite superb and England 's manager seems convinced we need a big number seven in the national side , yet that seems to suggest he is concerned with just one defensive aspect .
19 In chapters 6 and 7 we consider the empirical evidence relating to the model we have developed in this chapter .
20 It could be said that his attitude is as a result of his poverty but in chapter three we meet a young boy called Chuck Little who ‘ did n't know where his next meal was coming from ’ but who was also ‘ a perfect gentleman ’ and when he is contrasted to Bob Ewell 's son Burris we see that they are both in similar circumstances .
21 On page 35 we take a detailed look at ways of describing to the teacher how to ‘ drive the program ’ and how to use it in the classroom .
22 I think in terms of our our first duty to protect the public by keeping offenders locked up securely , yes by and large we do a good job and that , by keeping good order in prisons we do a good job generally speaking incidence are very few and far between after the mid eighties , things have settled down considerably .
23 To get all these we need a balanced diet .
24 On Sunday 6th we have a free day — a much needed respite to enable us to prepare some of our work for the next week — but in the evening we went to dinner with from the embassy , as well as with two senior visitors from London , one from the British Council ( , who is responsible for all Chinese visits ) and one from the Foreign Office .
25 As usual we take the immediate point — Frodo and the others want to get out of the forest — while reading through to a kind of universality : the ‘ shadowed land ’ is life , life 's delusions of despair are the ‘ woods ’ , despair will end in some vision of cosmic order which can only be hinted at in stars or ‘ sun ’ .
26 anybody they are in the area you know as they always say and ah sorry we need a back door so they say they offer one per door one
27 Now to this week 's competition , and for that we 've the ideal garment for winter sports fans .
28 We can plot the current flowing through the channel , which is here shown on the ordinate , as a function of the holding voltage , which is shown on the abscissa here , and when we do that we get a so-called current voltage relationship .
29 It may well be true that there is little evidence of a widespread parochial anti-clericalism in the early sixteenth century , if by that we mean an endemic lay hostility towards the local priesthood .
30 Will he get his right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Energy to take action now , as he has been urged to do by the European Energy Commissioner , to stop pit closures in this country , given that we produce the cheapest deep-mined coal in the European Community ?
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