Example sentences of "we expect [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We expect inflation to be higher as a result of the pound 's fall , which threatens to erode the initial competitiveness benefit as UK prices rise faster than those elsewhere and the real exchange rate rises again .
2 We expect EDS will take part in its future development and hope they can help in bringing down its processing costs , ’ Hjoth concluded .
3 We expect products that sell to go on selling .
4 The Economist Intelligence Unit concluded in its World Commodity Outlook 1989 : ‘ Short of climatic intervention — to which tea is less vulnerable than most other major crops — a continuation of the downtrend seems unavoidable : we expect London auction prices to average £1/kg , or even less , in 1989 . ’
5 Well , normally we expect things to go in straight lines .
6 Within the European time zone we expect competition to intensify with the creation of a single EC capital market and the possible advent of a single currency , the ECU .
7 For 1993 we expect development expenditure to be approximately £150 million less and within this budget we are planning to devote significant funds to our UK offshore projects in Morecambe Bay .
8 Again , I urge the House to consider the fact that we expect inspections of individual schools to take place on a four to five-yearly basis .
9 But we expect Alex Ferguson to try again for-Stuart Pearce at Forest , perhaps offering Neil Webb in part-exchange .
10 Unfortunately , we expect communication to be verbalised , and preferably in English !
11 ‘ And we expect others to keep coming forward . ’
12 Now we expect operators to identify the root cause and make the problem go away themselves , ’ said factory systems manager .
13 We expect Jesus to be in the right place at the right time , therefore his choosing of male apostles was quite deliberate , which must have theological significance and definite implications for the ministry today .
14 With their conveniences and their pleasant facades , the two cottages justify her affirmation , which exactly echoes Loudon 's own conviction , that ‘ Life in cottages might be happier than ours , if they were real houses fit for human beings from whom we expect duties and affections . ’
15 The general manager of the company Ian McCall said ; ‘ We have had a tremendous response already and we expect parents who wore them in the fifties and sixties to buy them for their children . ’
16 We expect prices to start rising in the late summer or autumn . ’
17 We expect Clinton 's election victory to consolidate this and deliver 2.5% GNP growth next year .
18 We expect surgeries to be open certain hours , and for you to undertake certain preventative health measures for all your patients whether they normally come to the surgery or not .
19 The measure of 1932 , which marked profoundly the discussions leading up to the Act of 1944 , was bitterly resisted ( especially in Wales ) and led the president of the Board of Education to argue in the Commons that secondary education should be reserved for ‘ selected children , the gifted and the intellectual ’ from whom ‘ we expect leaders of industry and commerce in the coming generation ’ .
20 In this context , the phrase ‘ higher learning ’ is particularly helpful , because it prompts us to ask whether in higher education there is anything especially ‘ higher ’ about the learning we expect students to achieve .
21 Simply that in higher education , we expect students to go beyond the material they encompass and to form their own affinity with it .
22 This will be the reason for the oddity of ( 54 ) where one such basic property is related to its noun through assignment , by contrast with the normality of ( 55 ) where it is given as one of the initial identifying properties of the subject entity ( there is obviously no difference of truth-value between the two ) : ( 54 ) ? a ladle which was heavy came down on his skull ( 55 ) a heavy ladle came down on his skull Thus , other things being equal we expect properties of such basic sorts to be used predominantly for identification by ordinary qualification .
23 In the way that military tactics fail by being repeated without regard to changed environment and situation , we expect people to live up to their reputation when the circumstances in which they are performing are very different .
24 Aiming at 70 Implementor sales for 1993 , Hugh McCartney , the company 's managing director said that 75% of business will still come from people developing applications for the AS/400 : ‘ We expect people to migrate in two to three years .
25 We expect people to pay their debts .
26 We expect BP Exploration 's production to remain broadly at 1992 's level for the next few years and then to rise after 1995 .
27 But , at a state banquet later that evening , Gorbachev stressed that " we expect reciprocity and count on America 's continued support and understanding " .
28 We expect reality but mime is not bound by such limitations .
29 We expect candidates to communicate effectively — but will not be looking for perfect Business English .
30 We impose heavy loads on those with both brain and brawn , and we expect saintliness from them as well .
  Next page