Example sentences of "[to-vb] our [noun sg] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 We have been able to consolidate our position as the major private label breakfast cereal supplier to the French market and enjoy further growth in other European markets .
2 However , half-a-thumb's-length beyond it ( roughly two minutes at 75kts ) is another very distinctive marker point , a 300ft mast reaching to over 700ft amsl ( L ) which we can use to back-confirm our time over the half-way point as we pass south abeam it .
3 Centres ' replies to the questionnaire , which will be treated in the strictest confidence , will be used to inform our thinking about the future development of these qualifications .
4 Along with feedback gained from interviews with centres and students , from seminars , and from correspondence , the results of this survey will be used to inform our thinking about the future development of general SVQ .
5 In the past where fee disputes have arisen following an M&A engagement we have always been able to establish our position to the lawyers ' satisfaction as a result of a clear and comprehensive engagement letter agreed to in writing by the client .
6 I ask you , forty of us slogging into the Jungle all because we bought his line about needing to work our way into the reality of a couple of deeply dead Jesuit priests .
7 We were just in our early twenties by the time I left The Pistols , beginning to find our way in the world , starting to get more confidence .
8 ‘ While we were trying to find our way in the Wolfwood , ’ said Snodgrass .
9 And this means that rather than attempting to answer the question " What are experiences ? " , in the manner of the conventional " philosophy of mind " , we ought to concentrate our attention on the question " How do experiences occur ? " , and analyse them qua types of evidential events .
10 We therefore decided to concentrate our analysis of the characteristics of users of temporary workers on private sector establishments .
11 Having adopted this generalists ’ view of data processing and exchange it might be prudent to secure our involvement in the development , testing and adoption of encoding standards .
12 Government will work in partnership to secure our heritage for the benefit of future generations .
13 From this viewpoint , we have to modify our analysis of the regulatory system in certain ways .
14 We will encourage farmers , retailers and manufacturers to work together to increase our share of the European food market .
15 It is easy to labour this point , but I have seen far too many advertising briefs which put marketing objectives ( like ‘ to increase our share of the market by 5 per cent ’ ) into the advertising objectives , or even the advertising strategy .
16 Rather we have attempted to show the potential of analysis and technical studies to increase our knowledge of the past .
17 Through exten-sive examination of unpublished material the project hopes to contribute to the debate on the long run decline of textile manufacture in the United Kingdom and also help to increase our understanding of the process of de-industrialisation in Northern Ireland .
18 The projects ' objectives are to provide an account of the social processes by which labour demands are generated , jobs formulated , personnel specifications developed and employees recruited and selected , and thus to increase our understanding of the ways in which people and jobs are matched in the labour market .
19 This project is intended to increase our understanding of the factors which have affected the growth in employment and output of the largest British and foreign-owned professional producer service firms .
20 The value of the project will be to increase our understanding of the conditions for social and political stability and instability in the contemporary world .
21 Our main European markets would appear to be around the Mediterranean , but with statistics showing that northern European summers are apparently becoming warmer I 've decided to launch our system in the United Kingdom as well . ’
22 Since these points are clearly illustrated by the Prologue , it might be as well to launch our discussion of the score , without more preamble , at the start of the work .
23 Without a pub to be seen for miles we decided to try our luck in the bar of the hilton .
24 The buxom Mlle Gilles is called upon every 10 minutes to reveal her all ( or three-quarters of it ) and while this is no sight to be despised , she could have appeared stark-naked from beginning to end and still failed to distract our attention from the movie 's essential mediocrity . ’
25 The rarer survivals can add an altogether different dimension to our understanding of the period , and serve to sharpen our awareness of the difficulty of establishing precisely how rare certain items were in society at the time .
26 But of course it is the individual who attracts the photographer in the first place ( and in this instance we know the reverse to be true ) , and Yass is obviously keen to sharpen our awareness of the personal face-to-face aspect of these relationships .
27 Whatever you do , it is as well to remember our half of the bargain ; a Rottweiler is far too intelligent to be left in a kennel for twenty-three hours a day .
28 Outside , it 's still raining , and as we gallantly struggle to open our umbrella in the wind , we suddenly find we 've come to a halt beside a large black car , and a man in a smart suit is opening the door for us to get in .
29 So far we have identified specific group agencies of socialisation , but it is obviously a mistake to restrict our definition of the concept to a process taking place only in these settings .
30 From such a generalized synthesis of the morphology of the small towns , it is possible to begin to define several recurring features which can help to evaluate our understanding of the overall level of complexity at individual sites , although these will clearly need to be refined as more new evidence emerges from the ground .
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