Example sentences of "[conj] we [verb] [pers pn] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ And we 've got Swire Sugden where we want him now , ’ I said .
2 Kipling wrote : ‘ We 've only one virginity to lose And where we lost it there our hearts will be . ’
3 Next we visited a grain processing mill , a hospital where they proudly displayed their own X-ray machine , a chicken-incubating factory , and a fish farm , where we watched them ingeniously catching fish with an enormous net stretched right across the fish-pool .
4 ‘ Confess your sins , Muslim dogs , ’ said the Bosnian refugee , in slightly cautious tones , ‘ and become Christians , or we slash you up ! ’
5 or we block it out :
6 Give us £23m or we blow you up
7 Although we accepted it back in 1931 , it would be a shock if it was seen today , ’ said Kerr .
8 The first problem is that although we claim we no longer look at such concepts of ‘ fault ’ and ‘ who 's to blame ’ when dishing out the money , or the children — even judges now realize that most marriage break-ups have two guilty parties — the law still forces one spouse to complain about the other .
9 United will by extra-motivated by the fact that we knocked them out of the Coca-Cola Cup , and Robbo 's return .
10 It was only half way back to Darlington that we realised we never had learned why Bobby Orton walked off against Burnhope .
11 That is not to say that Derek Bevan was wrong ; just to say that we saw it differently , that 's all .
12 It 's , it 's important that we nail it down very very quickly because the clients ' reports depend very much upon the input of the project engineer .
13 and the that we show you here tells you all about it , how to look after it and everything
14 If you like to think that we started discuss discuss this discussion by saying there was a demand after the war , you can see now that we met it in , over and over again cos these machines were all over America .
15 ‘ I 'm not saying that we pretend it never happened .
16 Our lawyers and judges will never turn off this mad process which , for them , is a fountain of dollars and a source of power : it is up to the Press to publicise civilised European libel procedures and insist that we get them too .
17 But what we certainly can do is take note of what you 've said , and ensure that we get it together for you to be consulted before we take decisions next year .
18 Er , would be ready for this Wednesday , but I said it 'll probably be Saturday that we pick it up .
19 It really does come down to , I do n't know , I mean , every year we play it very honestly and very straight , and we push him in a position where next year , if there is a next year , I think the last time that we played it straight we got clobbered , so let's pay a little bit less , and keep a bit back for when they come round a second time round .
20 The terrible thing about the modern attitude to death is that we pass it on to our children .
21 This year , which must prove that we dreamed it up , it was the THIRD Monday which saw the longest queues of all — to see John McEnroe and Michael Stich win the final set of the men 's doubles .
22 It gives credibility to the particular choice we as a self-defining ‘ human ’ group have made , and reinforces the validity of that choice by obscuring the fact that we make it voluntarily , rather than have it imposed on us by scientific laws which are unquestionable and necessary .
23 In fact what young children demand of us is not that we dilute the work , but that we make it more exciting , more tightly focused .
24 It was important to us in developing a new system now that we are very much of a worldwide supplier of accounting solutions , that we make it truly useable in all countries of the world .
25 ‘ The Single Market demands that we define Europe , not the UK , as our domestic market and that we make it as easy for a customer in Turin , Munich or Nice to buy from us as one in Coventry or London . ’
26 Also that we have the opportunities to witness and that we take them up .
27 I suggest that we take them not only seriously but literally , since they represent the very root of the relationship around which the Sonnets are structured .
28 I mean , maybe what I 'm hearing from the committee is that we take it back and look at the criteria and the ground rules .
29 " Perhaps it is our fault that we keep them so much in idleness ?
30 With regard to the three representatives , can I propose from the Chair that we split them very conveniently , one Liberal , one Labour , and one Conservative .
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