Example sentences of "[that] we [vb past] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 To be certain that the and /bcl-2 cells that we studied lacked a functional respiratory chain , we tested their respiratory function in two ways .
2 It was only after Patrick Jenkin became Industry Secretary that we began to see the proliferation of industrial support schemes .
3 We said on twenty seventh July that we planned to pay an unchanged dividend for the full year .
4 Two tenascin cDNA clones that we identified to have the AD1 sequence indicate the presence of two possible splice forms ie. , a full length transcript ( clone TN3.1 ) , and one in which repeat 11 and 12 are spliced ( clone H1 ) .
5 As our pick-up ti me approached we mustered under our patrol commander and soon moved back to base , tired but satisfied that we 'd done a good job .
6 I , I forgotten that it was Justine , I , it just threw me a bit that erm , erm , Nick asked me to let you know that we were here and that we 'd received the chairs .
7 that we 'd completed the erm er the site work on .
8 The national spotlight was on us — and it appeared to most of us that we 'd missed an open goal .
9 That low , dishonest decade was when we broke free of our parents , banished the Fifties , discovered that we 'd missed the Sixties , and tried to make the best of it with an orgy of revolting clothes , tasteless music and formless anomie .
10 I was beginning to think that we 'd missed the boat , even though we knew in our heart of hearts that the Lord wanted us in some form of full-time capacity .
11 and then we wrote home to mam that we 'd found a job , and that were it .
12 This process was one that we 'd enjoyed the public inquiry process for over fifty years and it would be most helpful if the minister at some point in his er later remarks perhaps could take this opportunity to tell the house that the Conservatives do not intend to side step the public inquiry stage of any future boundary proposals , European or I 'd be glad to give up .
13 Well I suppose at the , one of the best things , best examples of the difference was that my wife when she saw this house , knew that it was a house in which she could be happy , in which her tastes and , could spread themselves , erm rather than her tastes having to be curtailed by lack of space and lack of accommodation , erm , the fact that I had a garage which was essential er next to my house instead of some er quarter or twenty minutes ' walk away from where I lived as happened in London also made a terrific difference to comfort , erm the fact that there was a garden instead of a few windowboxes and a couple of tubs , all these things I think made one appreciate the fact that you 'd come , not only into a new town , but into a new way of life probably the fact that we had a staircase inside the house , which was the first time that we 'd had a staircase between our bedrooms and our living rooms
14 That we 'd had a short but intense affair , and when we 'd met again and realised we still felt the same about each other you 'd revealed how Thomas was mine . ’
15 We have all wished that we 'd had the perfect retort at some time , but most of us can only think of something smart about three days later .
16 I was afraid it might come out that we 'd got a cut as well .
17 We discovered that we 'd got a lot of unnecessary parts — things that were over-indulgent — so we chucked 'em out . ’
18 It was here that we sought to capture a record of the least-contacted tribal peoples while there was still time .
19 Our Council officers , and I refer to their report , recommended that we applied to run the Scheme .
20 ‘ The fact that we failed to reach the second round is a blow in many ways and I am so disappointed for everybody . ’
21 ‘ The fact that we failed to reach the second round is a blow in many ways and I am so disappointed for everybody . ’
22 Authors ' reply , — W R Gransden and Susannah Eykyn say that we failed to emphasise the need for safe prescribing of aminoglycosides , and they mention two truisms applicable to all drugs .
23 I have to confess that we failed to keep the secret until the day of publication : the sharp observation of sensed that ‘ something was going on ’ among his co-authors a few months before the book was published !
24 ‘ We have been lucky that we managed to convert the right strategy into the right results , ’ says Lord Weir .
25 Even worse was the realization that we had cut an oblique through the outer ditch in our extended town defences section .
26 ‘ I can still remember the feeling of intense shock , but also a feeling of superiority that we had heard the news before many other people , ’ says E. Walker , who was teaching infants at a primary school in North Yorkshire when Music and Movement was interrupted to bring the news .
27 The Americans were friendly and polite , but there was no mistaking their view that Britain had gone downhill to the point that we had become an irrelevance .
28 Mr Hopkin expressed his opinion that we had done a very good job in our efforts , he then gave his professional advice
29 It appeared that we had fulfilled a need among people .
30 It was on a trip to Frankfurt with a mixed load of several 2,000lb bombs and the varied load of experimental PFF flares and early target indicator devices ; Bennett always insisted that we had to carry a full load of the hurtful .
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