Example sentences of "we [verb] [prep] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 One day it will be like this for us in heaven when we shall see that some of the things we clung to on earth were only childish attachments .
2 It seems that all the things that we met with in life and thought of as advantages in the beginning , are found to be grave disadvantages ; and all those things that in our youth we thought of as severe disadvantages , at last come to be seen as benefits .
3 It is not going to be helpful to have the panel supplied with the information we asked for in relation to the Greater York area devised from the H B F table of commitments , confined to York City and the greenbelt .
4 I think today that if someone was designing a house one would incorporate all the modern additions which have suddenly become fashionable such as double porches , doubleglazing and er patio windows , I think that these things are perhaps a development from , in the same way as this house is a development from the rooms and the flats we lived in in London so that the modern conceptions of the things I 've mentioned could be incorporated as normal in the house certainly would be cheaper to incorporate them when building the house than adding them on .
5 When we got to within quarter of an hour q sorry quarter of a mile of the the actual village itself , and remember it 's quarter of a mile I 'm talking about not ten yards fifteen yards away , we saw a railway embankment in front of us .
6 The fact that certain regions in the UK have come to depend on declining industries explains in part the regional disparities of unemployment which we referred to in Chapter 3 .
7 Its more practical aspects have to do with what we referred to in Chapter 1 as the " inferential structure of data " : that is , how to effect a connection between the empirical materials , whatever their character , and our theoretical knowledge .
8 At the meeting on the fourth of November we referred to in paragraph four point eight , the use of permits was generally recognized as worthy of consideration .
9 I want to buy a Christmas tree and decorate it like we used to at school but Marie says we ai n't got enough money .
10 And this is a way for to fill up our purse Although we do get it with many a curse And the poem ends : Then hay for the Clothing Trade , it goes on brave ; We scorn for to toyl and moyl , nor yet to starve .
11 Were going next year , we hope to with Maurice , do n't he , he wants to go do n't he ?
12 Christ will give you strength even to bear this trouble — be sure you do not regret the decision we came to about Australia
13 Though what I am trying to do is just explore all these possible lines of thoughts erm in a political way , alright , but they do n't work out neatly and these critics got quite excited about so I thought I ought to point them out to you but you 're quite right in pointing out that they do n't work out neatly , O K. So we 've got to , where have we got to with George ?
14 Thus Quine can make use of psychological facts to inform someone such as Stroud that all we look for in inquiry is accurate prediction and control of ‘ triggerings of our sensory receptors ’ , and can show no interest in further sceptical possibilities .
15 This is what we look at in terms of er target of erm the er wallets we 're going to print and that is determined , not quite sure what the measurement is for estate agent it 's something to er to do combination of the number of peop er number of mailings they 've done in the last er twelve months and also the number of houses they have on their their books .
16 So are we going to in West Oxford now .
17 We have shown that ATF1 and a novel polypeptide ( that we refer to as CREB-binding-protein 100 or CBP100 ) are two proteins that can directly interact with CREB in undifferentiated F9 cells .
18 In the process we should critically re-evaluate how we understand the relationship between research , policy and practice in childcare and research , policy and practice in what we refer to as child abuse and child protection work .
19 This module would , Minsky suggests , alone have access to the model ( again possibly false , of course ) of how it itself related to all the other , lower , modules , and it might be expected to have some property of the type we refer to as consciousness or self-consciousness .
20 We hear from before birth and go on hearing continuously all the time .
21 Now one can say well what are we aiming for in terms of the sexual harassment free environment , and I think that what one would be aiming for is if not the atmosphere of a girls ' convent school one 's certainly aiming at an environment where women can work and study and interact without the sense of being constantly on display as sexual objects , and , you know , to that extent I do n't know if it is the case that a large number of the respondents are saying , you know , ‘ I have come from an environment when I have n't had to deal with this before , and I do n't expect to have to deal with it ’ then we should certainly sit up and take notice of that .
22 Leaving aside the Romans , whose tradition of town-planning had been completely forgotten after their departure , the earliest piece of town-planning that we know of in England is that carried out by Abbot Baldwin at Bury St Edmunds , between 1066 and 1086 .
23 Learning how to love — you see a lot of it depends on benevolence , as I say , there 's caring for other people , you see , developing a sense of community , you see , it is avoiding the sort of things we get into in Northern Ireland , erm Cyprus , Lebanon , where you get these absolutely nightmarish cultures of violence that just go on generation after generation and are utterly useless .
24 I mean it 's not just letting the excesses go which I think understand it when you first said it , so that idea in itself is a Party idea , it 's not just letting the , the peasants do it and say well okay what you 're trying to say now is that okay that we have got this strategy , we 'll let the excesses go and then we 'll stop it , we get to about stage B and stage C and move on and move on .
25 We talk about for instance reliable data delivery and transaction delivery .
26 ‘ It is obviously something Rosanne is aware of and a subject we talk about from time to time .
27 For example , many of the foreign firms we talked to in Brazil had adopted policies of limiting their capital budgets to locally generated profits , less dividends remitted home .
28 Their topics of conversation seemed very limited compared to what we talked about at home .
29 What we do n't know is whether March is a start of a new trend upwards above budget , that 's a different scenario cos then you can say okay , just like we talked about with claims and E W S.
30 She was not prosecuted ( though clearly she could have been ) under section 2 of the Official Secrets Act 1911 , possibly because the Government had just had its nose bloodied by a jury in the Clive Ponting trial , a case we deal with in Chapter 5 .
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