Example sentences of "we [vb base] [conj] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Even more dangerous is it when we insist that a man of two thousand years ago meant what we mean in so contentiously abstract a sphere as religious faith .
2 We fear that an accident may have befallen her . ’
3 To assert those alternatives and to insist upon them we mean that a designer should cease to be the industrial Eichmann of a large corporation .
4 We seem to be on firmer ground , however , if we suggest that a singer who draws upon a training in the English choral tradition will not readily perform in a way that is bogus , trivial or solipsistic , for the choral tradition is none of those things ; it embodies the results of countless individual strivings for the best results in conformity to a communal discipline .
5 This is a result that is much easier to account for if we suggest that a body clock is responsible for the alternation between sleep and activity .
6 We suggest that an excess of HsdM and HsdS may produce the methylase in vivo and that assembly of the endonuclease may be dependent upon the prior production of this methylase .
7 We suggest that an authority embarking on a project of this kind needs to give serious consideration to the time-scale for guaranteed funding and the relative merits of schemes which are openly competitive and those based on selection and sponsorship .
8 We cheer when a meerkat eats up a scorpion or a rattlesnake just for the hell of it .
9 Because much of the erupted magma was gas-poor , we propose that a subsurface connection exists between the intrusion and the summit feeder conduit ( Fig. 3 ) allowing gas to escape at the summit craters .
10 Mr Pienaar 's spokesman said : ‘ The Administrator-General is very disturbed that with the evidence at our disposal we realise that a situation could be building up which could lead to the ultimate defeat of the aims and objectives of Resolution 435 . ’
11 We say that a sentence is factually significant to any given person if , and only if , he knows how to verify the proposition which it purports to express — that is , if he knows what observations would lead him , under certain conditions , to accept the proposition as being true , or reject it as being false .
12 The most natural explanation of why we oppose checkerboard statutes appeals to that ideal : we say that a state that adopts these internal compromises is acting in an unprincipled way , even though no single official who voted for or enforces the compromise has done anything which , judging his individual actions by the ordinary standards of personal morality , he ought not to have done .
13 When we say that a child enjoys the security of a familiar story structure , what tools have we for analysing that structure ?
14 When we say that a flag at half-mast means that someone has died , we refer to a social convention that death shall be marked in this way .
15 Just as a motor car can not run along the road without an engine , we say that a food service facility , be it a hotel or restaurant , can not run without its engine and that engine is the food production facility .
16 When we say that a ring round the moon means rain , we refer to a connection in nature .
17 The poem mentions the tolling of a bell ; we say that a bell ‘ tolls ’ when it sounds one repeated single note .
18 If P is some occam term and x is a variable , we say that an occurrence of x in P is free if it is not in the scope of any declaration ( other than a parallel declaration ) of x in P , and bound otherwise .
19 Here we show that a cable of filamentous actin appears to run continuously around most of the wound margin .
20 For example , we show that a tax on investment income may , in the malleable capital model , be shifted via a rise in the gross rate of return , with its redistributive potential being consequently reduced .
21 We conclude that a standing committee for library and resources should be a feature of the structure of every secondary school and that its membership should be such as to permit some cascade effect on the development of resources , syllabuses and teaching methods throughout a school .
22 We conclude that a project such as this needs to strike the right balance between , on the one hand setting criteria and a code of practice which wills structure and direct developments in participating institutions , and , on the other , permitting each institution appropriate independence and room for initiative and discretion .
23 We conclude that a bolus of cholera toxin of 6.25 to 25 µg can be used safely as an intestinal secretagogue when the described precautions are being taken .
24 He says we predict that a reservoir of this size will be essential if we 're to supply our customers with the water the need .
25 We consider that a child in care has a right to at least as good an education as any other child .
26 If there is an honest portrayal of human life and relationships , however extreme , we consider that a production can be judged according to the canons of aesthetic criticism .
27 We consider that a rewording of the ‘ definition ’ of charity is needed and we favour a definition which would allow of flexibility in interpretation .
28 We complain if a band stays away too long ; we complain if they outstay their welcome .
29 Indeed , we suspect that a rule which was never broken would not be a rule in our sense at all but rather an inevitability with the logical status of a law .
30 ‘ The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul , ’ and from now on we read that an evil or distressed ruach elohim troubled him .
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