Example sentences of "[subord] we [vb base] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Hello there … welcome to Australia for a Central South sporting special … where we 've come for a race of the future … the Solar Challenge … sun powered cars racing through the wild outback … that 's our Friday Feature … first it 's back to Britain … for our football parade
2 They 've got no use for words back there where we 've come from .
3 where we 've got to with our recycling initiative , and then we can look at that grant in the light of what we 've been told by Carol .
4 There are still areas where we tend to look at the other as ‘ the resident expert ’ , or at least more expert than we consider ourself to be .
5 Since such rules can be optionally applied to the same basic sentence structures , they provide a linguistic basis for the notion of * In this , as in subsequent chapters , we number examples and extracts only where we need to refer to them in the text .
6 To begin with , the Palestinian leadership must conduct an honest and tough critique of the events of the past , of our position at present , and where we want to go from here .
7 In a deprived area of Slough there is a school where we have explained to children the importance of blood pressure monitoring at an early age .
8 This brief outline gives some idea of what has been going on and where we have got to , a brief outline of the key tasks , and the progress made on these .
9 Although we tend to think of selection interviewing as a conversation between two people there are several variations on this theme , all of which have their advantages and disadvantages .
10 Although we tend to think of industrial effluent , sewage is a more important source of pollution .
11 What is curious for the observer from the twentieth century is the debate about the possibility of secular education , something after all we now take for granted , although we do hear of debates over the teaching of ‘ creationism ’ in backwoods .
12 Although we have argued for the view that law is differentiated rather than monolithic , we have to stress that there do exist common factors and interrelations , both within specific arenas and within the legal system as a whole , that have to be considered .
13 I had acquired his confidence , which I believe I still retain , but for a number of reasons which were quasi-political we drifted apart towards the end of his second premiership , and although we have remained on friendly terms , the intimacy has long vanished .
14 Delia Cope believes that although we have suffered from slavery , imperialism , capitalism , and exploitation , we should dismiss our feelings , keep smiling and put up with this shit .
15 Although we have gone over ground that we have gone over many times in the House , the debate has been extremely interesting .
16 Erm well slightly different in the fact that er we er have two close schemes with far more er beneficiaries than there are er subscribing members , and at the moment that are four nominated by the er employer and four by the unions er we wish to say a pensioner erm that the rights were a pensioner nominee to that board of trustees , because we feel that er the situation is er is going to increase , we 've got so many beneficiaries and that the pensioners have no representative er I know that erm people on the boards of trustees are completely impartial , but on the other hand there is no pensioner there , the members are unsure of the fund , because of what 's been said , not that I 'm implying it 's not a secure fund , it is a secure fund , but they think why are they keeping the pensioners off , they there is some sort of hidden agenda they will not have us on there because neither of the businesses although we have tried for several years er they will not entertain at the moment erm a pensioner trustee , and yet Professor Good in his report acknowledges the merit of pensioner nominated trustees , er particularly in the sort of schemes where we 've got , wh where th the majority of beneficiaries .
17 But they do not question traditional psychology 's male-identified emphasis on , for example , objectivity and success : ‘ We are both feminists … and although we have tried to be objective about the value-laden topics discussed in this book , we know we can not have succeeded entirely ’ ( 1974 : 12–13 , my emphasis ) .
18 Erm and er the other thing about it is that although we have to look at , in order to discover the preference , we have to look at each dimension as a discrete entity , once you 've found the preferences , they actually have a dynamic relationship with each other .
19 Although we have to pay for hi we have to pay for Adrian you see .
20 Let's come back to it then , so we 've agreed a basic heading , although we need to play with that a bit , name , year tick indicates end of end of key stage
21 In America , of course , trustees are chosen much more from the business community than they are here , and those trustees have wanted to encourage the commercial side of American museum life much more than we 've done in Britain .
22 I thought that the thought of , er , the thoughts gone into your erm plans and your presentation was much greater than we 've had on previous courses .
23 It 's more than we 've had in recent years , judging by the general
24 I think what we actually want is more people who are more in tune with working people and their hopes , and their dreams and their aspirations , and tha in , in parliament , in the House of Commons than we 've got at the moment and so the motion I 'm putting forward which is to propose that we actually look at the Parliamentary Panel and make sure we get a few decent shop stewards in the House of Commons , a few people who got experience of actually being on the shop floor , a few people who got experience in the last fourteen years , that the last four Conservative governments have actually tried and defend and fight for the interests of working people right down the grass root , those are the people that we actually need in the House of Commons and we shall be looking at our Parliamentary Panel and we shall be looking at it very seriously to ensure that we get those sort of people onto that Parliamentary Panel and those sort of people into the House of Commons , that 's the best way to represent working people in Britain today and that 's the sort of contribution the G M B should be making .
25 You have unspend , you have spent , and you actually spent more than we 've got in some instances .
26 July the first more members er in , in , in local authorities than er than we 've got in the whole of our union right and we 've got twenty five per cent of our membership in , in local authorities and we 're getting hammered and we 're also getting at the same time privatization , we 're seeing local authorities being broken up and we 're seeing a creation of large numbers of employers .
27 People throughout the world seem to admire these institutions , and far more than we appear to do in Britain .
28 President Michael Ainslie noted ‘ a greater level of consignment activity than we have seen for some time .
29 We no more have to leave everything to hazard than we have to drown in the sea . ’
30 I think one of the things that is necessary is that you do need quite a strong centre within government at the moment , and , as we deal with all these complicated issues , whether they are … political or intelligence issues [ such ] as … the Falklands Isles or whether it 's something highly controversial such as nuclear power or defence or even road systems , you need a much stronger centre than we have got at the moment .
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