Example sentences of "[adv] in [adj] [noun sg] we " in BNC.

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1 I ca n't speak for London hotels , but basically in this region we have a fair number of esteemed country house hotels , as well as the inner town hotels , and all of them offer a service at a very competitive price , and perhaps this is something we should encourage — the American visitor to stay out of London erm and come and stay in London 's country , as we call ourselves , round the Thames and Chilterns .
2 ‘ For too long in this country we have pushed parental responsibility into the sidelines .
3 I think especially in this environment we will continue to pursue that policy . ’
4 Clearly there is some chicanery going on and perhaps in due course we will find out the truth .
5 ‘ We hope Mr Stein will be working for us long into the future and obviously in that case we would need to apply for another permit for him .
6 So in that case we 've got to do a bit of research have n't we ?
7 Since the effects of the damage are largely restricted to language , the disruption can not affect the whole brain , so in that sense we are justified in thinking of the brain as consisting of functionally independent modules .
8 So in that sense we 're below average .
9 Though that 's beginning to be qualified a little because of the erm effects of erm national legislation , for example national employment legislation nowadays requires that all employers in a certain field of employment , and universities is one , erm pursue similar policies towards their staff , and indeed in our case erm pay them on the same pay scales and erm so in that sense we have to enter into agreements with trade unions and others which are binding on our members .
10 Erm so in actual fact we 'd 've been there or thereabouts had we not made the budget assumptions that we did .
11 Well each has a particular history erm each has a particular culture and pattern of doing things , structure of government as I 've mentioned but also of course we have common interests so in foreign policy we sometimes draw differences between what we would regard as the direct interests of each state and what we can call common interests of mankind .
12 This needs to be incremented by the number of unused pages you are lacking , so in this example we need to add to our total global pages count , giving us a new required total of 4050 .
13 Several methods of implementing pen.loop control , including a microprocessor.based scheme , are introduced in that chapter , so in this Section we can concentrate on the relative merits of software and hardware.intensive systems for the detailed control of stepping rate .
14 Because only in this way we regard ourselves not merely as a variant of a human prototype but as a being with its own irreplaceable essence .
15 Wrap it around me like a Cupid-woven shawl and then let's dance together in this maze we call living , searching for the centre which we all know is death .
16 If we could only stay here longer in this village we could take the cure .
17 Thus in free fall we have .
18 Finally in this section we prove ( at last ! ) that every irreducible element in Z is necessarily a prime element so that the concepts of primeness and irreducibility coincide in Z. We need a definition and a trivial consequence .
19 Finally in this chapter we want to return to the source of all social science data , and the ultimate object of social scientific investigation , namely the members of society .
20 Early in this study we showed that the scale of electronic information markets is already substantial .
21 If we were to express this need openly and directly in social chit-chat we would risk offending others and we could expect a strong reaction in terms of them rejecting , over-powering or accepting us ( in this instance their luck could be in ) .
22 Later in this chapter we will examine the gradual growth of government concern to assume a closer control of the process .
23 Later in this chapter we will meet others .
24 Later in this chapter we examine in detail their major characteristics and the nature of the courses which they offer .
25 Sparta did not abandon her aims in Thessaly ; in 426 the Spartans founded a colony at Herakleia in Trachis , which commanded the Thessalian border ( p. 131 ) ; and later in this book we shall follow this thread of Spartan policy further still ( see p. 153 and chapter 14 , p. 186 ) .
26 Later in this section we show how to analyse these induced effects to determine how the burden of the tax is ultimately divided between producers and consumers .
27 Right in that case we 'd better have a look at that now .
28 Now in that case we had to select those measures er by knowledge of the problem .
29 So far in this section we have looked at the present provision of training and at ways of improving the system .
30 So far in this chapter we have concentrated on only a small selection of the most creative and influential thinkers in theology from Schleiermacher to the turn of the century .
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