Example sentences of "we [vb base] [that] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Notes We regret that the tour is not entirely suitable for people in wheelchairs .
2 We regret that the Department has encouraged parents to expect schools to report to them using these measurements so prematurely .
3 And we stress that the absence of noticeable discriminatory behaviour says nothing about how defendants perceived their treatment .
4 We stress that the list serves a heuristic purpose : it enables us to collect data on a fairly systematic basis .
5 We may scrape and spit and dab and rub , until the point when we declare that the truth stands plain before us , thanks to xylene and propanol and acetone .
6 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 .
7 Integrity becomes a political ideal when we make the same demand of the state or community taken to be a moral agent , when we insist that the state act on a single , coherent set of principles even when its citizens are divided about what the right principles of justice and fairness really are .
8 The champagne went down very well on the night the Tobacco Institute of Australia 's appeal substantially failed , but we fear that the hangover from this report may last rather longer .
9 We fear that the construction of a sea defence wall will pave the way for road and business developments and will signal the end of Southport as a resort . ’
10 A great number of federal nave ships have congregated in the Kornati National Reserve , and we fear that the area 's unique geomorphology and marine life may be threatened by mines they have left .
11 More importantly , we fear that the suggestion that this may happen may deter some doctors from giving adequate doses of these drugs when they are properly indicated .
12 We fear that an accident may have befallen her . ’
13 We postulate that the alternation of homogeneous gabbro and graded layers is produced by a magma chamber that remains below the critical concentration for substantial periods of time and generates a steady accumulation of crystals on the floor in the cotectic proportions .
14 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 .
15 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 .
16 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 .
17 We suggest that the issue is not that ‘ a considerable possibility of overtreatment ’ exists but that potentially damaging and ineffective treatment may be undertaken outside the confines of a randomised controlled trial .
18 Because the glial growth factors and specific activators of the p185 erbB2 receptor are encoded by the same gene , we suggest that the formation of tumours derived from Schwann cells , and perhaps from other glial sources , is regulated by the supply of glial growth factors and by the activity of the p185 erbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase .
19 With all the pieces in place , we suggest that the bridle should now claim full attention as its symmetry and adjustment will be critical for best performance .
20 We suggest that the act of baptizing the child is viewed with superstition as much as religious belief ; that it is ‘ better ’ for the child to be baptized in case anything happens to it .
21 We suggest that the choosing of the names for the child enables the parents to pay compliments to other relatives .
22 We suggest that the presence of acetylcholine alone will not provide an adequate stimulus for the sweat response in the event of nerve degeneration , as the full response requires the combined action of both transmitters , provided that the receptors remain intact after nerve degeneration .
23 We suggest that the procedure laid down in the Environmental Protection Act for registers under parts I and VI of the Act could be used in this situation .
24 In Chapter 9 we suggest that the provision of user-friendly , confidential services will encourage this surfacing , whereas repressive policies , stigmatisation or persecution will discourage it .
25 We suggest that the eviction is an unsubstantiated , politically motivated , empire building exercise of no benefit to the village .
26 We suggest that the actin cable acts as a contractile ‘ purse string ’ to close up the embryonic wound .
27 Because of the known toxicity of sulphide in the gut we suggest that the role of sulphate reducing bacteria in the pathogenesis of colonic diseases warrants further investigation .
28 While not wishing to deny that there are differences in the ways executives , bureaucracies and assemblies operate compared with law courts , we suggest that the politics of any system can not be understood without some awareness of the crucial part played by law in its operations .
29 We suggest that the practice of some other projects ( for example Essex Education Support Grant Mathematics Project ) of making innovations in " Units " of secondary and feeder primary schools deserves serious consideration in planning future projects in library provision and study skills .
30 However , we suggest that the use of physiological data that can be influenced by medical and nursing intervention should not be used for audit .
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