Example sentences of "[to-vb] we of the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The Festival of Britain sought to persuade us of the imminence of a better and less contorted world .
2 Just to convince us that all these things that he tells us about are somehow present , to convince us of the heinousness of what he 's done .
3 Milton 's task , of course , is to convince us of the sin involved .
4 The wildfire growth of the Boy Scouts serves to remind us of the enormity of the Edwardian era 's preoccupation with its youth , and the groundswell of not only national enthusiasm but also deep funds of social anxiety .
5 A recent pronouncement by a former Education Minister serves to remind us of the kind of thinking we must guard against .
6 The paradigm example to remind us of the conventionality of the relationship between meanings and perceptions is the case of expressions for colour , and this holds good even if we are willing to accept a case for the universality of certain focal points of colour perception . )
7 Neither does the statement , ‘ All those coloured glass pictures of people which you see in the windows of churches , have been put there to remind us of the good which those people did during their lives .
8 His ironic protestations — " " My wit is short ; ye may well understonde " " ; " " Blameth nat me … " " — serve only to remind us of the fact that here we have a court poet playing first the pilgrim-narrator " Chaucer " and then playing a churl .
9 The word serves to remind us of the importance of that element so far not introduced into the discussion : diplomacy .
10 John Bums , President of the Local Government Board , when introducing the first legislation with ‘ town planning ’ in its title in 1909 declared : These objectives may seem happily optimistic when contrasted with subsequent achievements , but they serve to remind us of the tension that always exists in town planning between the engineers and the sociologists ( Goldsmith 1980:Ch. 7 ) .
11 I wonder if in ten years ' time Mr. Duggan will be looking back at videos of ‘ England 's glory years ’ and then be writing to RW&P to remind us of the lock forward who elbowed his opposite number from behind , perforating his eardrum , or the flankers who really do n't seem to mind where their feet or hands come into contact with their opponents .
12 But stoat , butterflies , wood lark , redstart , wheat ear , lap wing and stone curlews — to remind us of the days when the great bustard roamed the wild sandy spaces of Break in droves .
13 I.M. Dalby , Osric Place , Newton Aycliffe : I was at Maynards in the Haymarket , Newcastle , training to be manageress at the Bishop Auckland branch , when a lady from the snack bar next door came in to tell us of the passing away of the King .
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