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

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1 As so often when we contemplate English village society much depended upon particular local conditions .
2 For example , what messages are we conveying when we separate some children from others ?
3 When we know each other better we will use more tactile communications , such as pushing , slapping , stroking and supportive gestures .
4 We must know what we are letting ourselves in for , theoretically , when we use such measures .
5 Whereas the serial usage of Example 139 ( the same series in each voice ) easily avoids the occurrence of octaves , octaves are formed only too easily when we use different forms together , as on the second quaver of the last bar , where all voices sound D or E♭ .
6 If we 're just talking about the niceties of the way these things are laid out , previous set of procedures say things like page one-o-two , page one-o-three etc , and I think that is probably good practice if you can look at a page number and so you know exactly how many pages to expect so , we can probably do that when we re-issue these procedures as well .
7 The third is ‘ ideal-typical ’ , as when we invoke microeconomic theory in order to model the rational choice by the agent ( in so far as the action was zweckrational ) .
8 That we will keep all information of a confidential nature about [ ] Plc and [ ] Plc 's business and financial affairs which come to our knowledge during negotiations for the sale of the Shares to you confidential and accordingly we will not disclose any such information to any person or use any such information other than wholly in connection with such negotiations except to the extent that it is , already when we receive such information , or becomes thereafter , public knowledge through no fault of any of us .
9 We can only give to Him what we receive from Him , and when we receive living bread and living water from the house of bread , there is no other possible response than worship .
10 ‘ We will do so when we receive formal notification of the decision . ’
11 But we got brickbats instead of justice when we exposed young mother Lucy Marshall in October last year for dealing in drugs .
12 We were both absorbed in our work when we heard angry cries : the owner of the field hurrying towards us armed with a big stick .
13 Great big sign on it , because people will , you know , I mean Tesco 's when we went last night it was packed , no you probably did n't see it
14 No , well they 've actually done something this time , the accountant 's going to be there , I mean when we went last time they just said we know nothing about running a hall , we bought you here to tell us and charged us for the privilege .
15 We are the artists , and if our life is a dark , jagged abstract when we prefer Impressionist pastels which dance with light , we should ask ourselves why we painted it that way .
16 Only when we reach Victorian times do we find its status rising again , thanks to the sentimentality of the period .
17 Simon of Cyrene comes to help me when we reach New Scotland Yard . ’
18 Why is it that we can look at organizations which we ourselves have worked in for most of our lives , where we have complained bitterly , where over drinks with our colleagues or at the Christmas pantomime or some other time we have given vent to our irritation at these bad organizational and behavioural characteristics ; and yet when we reach high positions in companies we consider them to be something which is beyond our capability to influence ?
19 Economists can then theorise about what happens when we remove those assumptions one by one .
20 Does not that show that when we introduce private enterprise we turn muck into brass ?
21 When we apply these views to early childhood we begin to have a clearer picture of deaf children 's future .
22 When we hear such sounds we do not pay attention to things like pitch and timbre .
23 Is n't it wonderful to realize that when we hear that noise now it 's because people are either flying for pleasure or business purposes .
24 As we shall see , however , when we review that research in the next chapter , there remains a problem of interpretation and evaluation .
25 When we ask these questions , we enter the domain of sociolinguistics .
26 So when we received persistent telephone calls from our clients asking whether we had heard that all was not well with the horse , we had to take a view .
27 When we received this guitar it was just one week old .
28 ‘ Later when we quizzed British Airways about why they flew in when the war had started we were just stone-walled . ’
29 He looked just like he did when we played real gigs .
30 When we played that tape back last night .
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