Example sentences of "as we [verb] in the " in BNC.

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1 As we noted in the previous chapter , the nation of Israel occupied a central place in the realisation of this hope , serving as the gathering-point of the nations ( Isa. 24:23 ; Zech. 14:9 ; Obad. 21 ) .
2 As we noted in the last chapter , to say that a decision or action is subject to judicial review is to say that it can be challenged on the basis of the rules and principles of public law which define the grounds of judicial review .
3 As we noted in the introduction , however , problems arise as soon as one enquires about the relationship between ‘ science ’ and ‘ religion ’ in the past .
4 ( It is this shift which , as we noted in the Introduction , supplies the chief rationale for this book . )
5 However , so long as we remain in the Community , Parliament has effectively handed over a number of functions that it has traditionally fulfilled .
6 As we argued in the previous chapter , this profits squeeze fundamentally reflected overaccumulation .
7 The scope or character of a piece of criticism is naturally related to the magazine or newspaper in which it appears , as we noticed in the case of Dore Ashton 's dismissal from the New York Times because it was asserted that her work could not be understood by the paper 's readers .
8 ‘ What can I do ? ’ he says as we walk in the fields near his home in Gerrard 's Cross , Bucks .
9 Taff enquired as we walked in the direction of our trench .
10 As we indicated in the introduction , we are mainly concerned in this book with courses that lead to recognized qualifications .
11 As we indicated in the discussion of sampling , the survey method , especially the explanatory survey , has been subjected to severe criticism and from social researchers whose own careers have been forged within the tradition of variable analysis .
12 As we witnessed in the examples with which this chapter opened , cultural negotiation is not merely about amassing information but about interpretation of texts which , of necessity , are obliged to adopt constantly shifting devices ( to recall the terms of Wyatt 's sonnet ) .
13 I never took him again because as we went in the big dog bounded from his mistress ' side and produced a particularly sonorous blast as if in greeting .
14 As we announced in the Budget , no one 's Uniform Business rate will go up this year by more than the rate of inflation — 4.1 per cent .
15 As we saw in the chapter dealing with rules , it is not enough for your punch to be an effective scoring technique ; it must be seen to be so , and this entails making its success obvious .
16 As we saw in the last chapter , the operation of discretion by the police is a particular fascination in the sociology of policing , but discretion is often viewed narrowly in terms of law : whether the police apply or omit the letter of the law .
17 If they were not , then , as we saw in the echoes of this theory which can be found in Hobbes 's resolutio-compositive method , the proper order of demonstration would have been reversed .
18 As we saw in the first chapter , an adult with this sort of emotional history finds it very hard to deal with separation of any sort .
19 In ballet , the Mariinsky ( or the Kirov , as we have known it since 1935 ) has an almost unassailable reputation , with the choreography of Marius Petipa as one of its foundations — as we saw in the pas de deux from Le Corsaire , danced brilliantly and poetically by Elvira Tarasova and Igor Zelensky , and in Diana and Actaeon , which highlighted the virile athleticism of Farukh Ruzimatov .
20 If being a real person implies consciously living before God , as we saw in the previous chapter , then the integrity of a man and woman living together needs the further consciousness of God in both their lives .
21 As we saw in the example of the cleaner fish ( pages 186–7 ) , reciprocal altruism is not confined to members of a single species .
22 The problems of Kosovo , as we saw in the previous section , are mainly economic .
23 Feelings , as we saw in the entry under that heading ( see pages 66 to 69 ) , either help or hinder your behaviour .
24 As we saw in the last section , all shops offer a service to the customer , although the type of service may vary .
25 As we saw in the last section , knowing your product well helps sell goods .
26 This leads directly to a further difference : an orthodox practitioner is likely to treat all cases of influenza with the same drug , an antibiotic perhaps ; whereas the homoeopathic practitioner may use different remedies , depending on the patient 's reaction to the influenza , as we saw in the cases illustrated above .
27 Keats , as we saw in the preceding section , concluded with the same emphasis .
28 Here there are often too many people ( not too\few ) but safety does not lie in numbers , as we saw in the Champs-Elysées story .
29 As we saw in the last chapter , Hooke 's law is really only true for small strains and at large strains the interatomic force curve bends over so that the strain energy is less than we have calculated , very roughly about half .
30 A further 44 per cent of all elderly people live only with a spouse and , as we saw in the last chapter , only about 14 per cent are living with others- ‘ non-spouses ’ .
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