Example sentences of "if [pers pn] [verb] [to-vb] these " in BNC.

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1 If their full bellies make me fail to recognise my communality with a woman of colour whose children who do not eat , because she ca n't find work ; or a woman who has no children because her insides are rotten from home abortions and sterilisation ; or if I fail to recognise the lesbian who chooses not to have children , or the woman who remains closeted because her homophobic community is her only life support ; the woman who chooses silence instead of another death ; the woman who is terrified lest any anger triggers the explosion of hers ; if I fail to recognise these women as other faces of myself , then I am contributing to each of their oppressions , but also to my own .
2 If you wish to view these you should reinvoke the option with the start date specified as that of the 16th mail message .
3 If you try to squeeze these requirements in around the mainstream business , you will be left with scrappy little bits of free time that are useless , and your visitors will feel cheated .
4 Worth bearing in mind if you plan to transfer these colourful pot plants into the garden after flowering .
5 And if you fail to spot these , a quick glance at the contents of his bookshelf gives it away .
6 But then you foil a new project to your expenditure and say look if you want to do these as indeed , you 've expressed then it 's going to cost you so much .
7 This was put by an MP of long experience to the House of Commons Environment Committee : ‘ If you want to save these buildings , you will only save them by stealth . ’
8 I can tell you you 're in for some trouble if you start that because I I is you you 're all in trouble if you want to start these smaller committees , we have looked at the committees and as I say we make no apology for the number of committees or the number that 's on 'em .
9 But surely Mr Chairman , if , if you want to integrate these people into the family unit they would go along with what the family would normally do .
10 We can not explain the special responsibilities of political office , therefore , if we try to build these directly from ordinary principles of private morality .
11 We believe political officials have responsibilities we could not defend if we had to build these directly from the ordinary requirements of individual personal morality most of us accept for ourselves and others in nonpolitical life .
12 If we want to coat these things at any time in erm acetate
13 My Lords in any case , the best arrangements if we have to have these extra people would be to have a number appointed er but encouraged by th the police authority itself .
14 If we fail to help these children now they will not be able to contribute to the social economic wellbeing of the nation and may cost us in time more social and financial in , in , in the future , so it 's good investment , we 're friendly with them , we , we do sympathize them but it 's only common sense and good investment that we fully recompense that the to the level it should n't be er by the Home Office that is to replace fifteen percent o of seventy five , I think seventy of .
15 If we continue to ignore these people , especially the young , we may be fighting them in the near fu future as they are actively being targeted by the far right British National Party and other fascist organizations that are using this sense of desertion .
16 Examples of this may be : the agoraphobic person who never goes out because they believe they will collapse and die of a heart attack ; the lift phobic who believes they may become trapped in the lift and suffocate to death ; a person who avoids meeting others because , if a disagreement starts , they believe they will lose their temper and hit people ; and last , a person may obsessively check the locks on doors and windows , believing that somebody is bound to break into the house if they fail to make these checks .
17 If he fails to follow these simple rules the consequence will be economic failure .
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