Example sentences of "[Wh det] we [verb] at the " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 KPMG should not be associated with an Investment Overview which we know at the time of issue to be misleading or factually incorrect .
2 This unruffled progression fits perfectly the sort of chain of correlations of consequences which we disentangled at the start of this chapter but it does not seem to offer the prospect of the decisive determination of a particular result .
3 Despite all this , the hopeful prophecy which we quoted at the beginning of this book has not been fulfilled .
4 That 's been er er a matter which has been erm discussed er at some length by Stragg as has the topic of er house building and the the problems of er capacity for er new house instruction and other development within the , the Council but a number of erm matters er not least of which has been er the departure of two key members of staff during the period er there has er I 'm afraid been a degree of slippage and the original programme that we have put to you and which you agreed which we said at the time was ambitious er is already er showing signs of stress and it looks now I 'm afraid that it will not be er in the early part of the summer that the structure plan in draft form will be available and ready to be approved for consultation purposes , but towards the end of the summer and er er into the early autumn .
5 Even Vienna , which we reached at the end of the journey , seemed disappointing by comparison .
6 In his novel The Human Age , D. B. Wyndham Lewis postulates the theory that after death , as we stand on that other shore , at the gate of eternity , we will each one assume the shape and form which we had at the time when we best realised our essential selves .
7 As some hon. Members may know , I have some interest in that subject , and I hope that I shall be able to have an Adjournment debate in which to discuss the process by which we arrived at the present stage of the project .
8 And I 'll be back after the weather with tonight 's Lifeline in which we look at the problem of alcoholism .
9 And I can see no other way of proceeding than that in which we proposed at the moment .
10 It is not satisfactory to change a policy such as that which we have at the moment , and to have add-ons for the environment .
11 But the major problem is that the sites which we have at the present moment are not controlled , and if we could get proper sites , properly managed , I think you would find that the whole erm picture of a gipsy site in an area would be much better received by the public than it is at the present .
12 Admittedly such corollaries as ‘ Face facts ’ , which we introduced at the very start of the discussion in the first chapter , do support their authority by the urgency of factual awareness in choices of means .
13 Let us chart the way by which we arrive at the Fundamental Principle .
14 That 's what we said at the general election .
15 These are what we took at the museum are n't they ?
16 No no put them back in there darling , they 're what we got at the pictures
17 Er and it was much easier to be living on the premises , that 's what we felt at the time .
18 Theoretically , we might expect this to be so , since the same environment tends to support the same kind of organisms , but in fact the persistence of some fossils appears to go far beyond what we know at the present day .
19 More than physical possession , in which , Proust says , one actually possesses nothing , Marcel seeks from Albertine reassurance concerning his own distinctiveness , his separateness , his individuality , and in Proust 's conception of love , therefore , failure is inevitable , because despite the conventionally unifying language of love , what we seek at the most profound level is not contact with another person , but contact with ourselves .
20 Yes well quite simply , I mean we know all the replies from the bridal magazines , I mean we know what we sell at the Christmas fair and what we sell Christmas cracker-wise .
21 ‘ I need to reflect upon what we saw at the Tower . ’
22 And so it goes on through life ; always a struggle between wanting to hold on to what we have at the same time as we are reaching out for new joys and satisfactions ; always the dilemma of making choices , of greedily wanting everything , of resenting having to let anything go .
23 What we are looking to do here is to water down what we have at the moment .
24 No , it 's not a good idea at all , we should stick with what we have at the moment , the representation of people who opt to pay the political levy .
25 What we have at the moment is a situation where we discharge 17 million tons of wet sewage from vessels into the river each year .
26 And what the manifesto is , is trying to do is to er set an agenda for about how the lot of private homes can be improved , and er fixing rent is one thing which the government er traditionally has had a responsibility for and which needs , er must be linked in with conditions because what we have at the moment is a situation where you get , in Oxford , a er a family living in one room being charged er over two hundred pounds a week by an individual landlord , and that 's clearly unacceptable .
27 What we do at the end of the year we have n't quite worked out , but we are very much committed to sharing child care and professional space if you like , but we are very privileged in that academic work allows one the flexibility to work in the hours that you find convenient and so on and allows you the flexibility to make this kind of family arrangement .
28 That 's why we came out with it 'cause it reflected what we liked at the time . ’
29 Well I do n't know it 's just what we liked at the time you know , we liked anything that was considered a bit way out then , you know
30 No , would you tell me what sort of word it is remembering what we did at the beginning of the week
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