Example sentences of "us [vb infin] [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Let us think beyond the problems to the opportunities and potential which lie before us .
2 Let us wait in the shadows . ’
3 But caution is required where miracles come into play ; let us stick to the facts .
4 Let us look at the figures for central Government expenditure per head of population in the north and the south .
5 Let us look at the stalks
6 Let us look at the problems every negotiator has to overcome .
7 Let us look at the factors considered during the formal decision-making process .
8 Let us look at the implications of these arguments a little more by examining the implications , for welfare and for social policy , of policy developments in those important policy areas that no one defines as social policy : foreign and defence policy , and economic policy .
9 Let us look at the strengths and weaknesses of these two viewpoints .
10 Let us begin with the eight-year-olds , at the second stage of sophistication .
11 Let us begin at the roots of this multifarious society .
12 ‘ Let us meet outside the gates , ’ he said , ‘ and draw up the day 's work . ’
13 Supplying engines to projects like this lets us compete with the supercars and avoid all the complicated polemics they create , ’ said Reitzle .
14 Ebert made us go to the dressing-rooms after the fight .
15 In conclusion , hopes that the " outcomes movement " will become the " central nervous system that can help us cope with the complexities of modern medicine " ( Epstein 1990 ) expect too much from a promising development .
16 I keep remembering the last night we were here — same hotel and all — and how Matt and I went out and got stinko-paralytico together and ended up doing the Zorba dance and got thrown out and Matt pointing at me and saying to the waiters Hey do n't you recognize Mista Rick from Parkway Peninsula and they did n't and made us pay for the plates .
17 ‘ Let us walk round the gardens until you have to go home , my pretty cousin . ’
18 Let us start with the objectives .
19 The great advantage — let us talk about the advantages — to many single people was that the community charge was fairer than the rating system .
20 So let us turn from the obstacles to applying in practice the theoretical truism in the first proposition of the Plowden Committee — that ‘ there may now well be excessive social services for some purposes ’ — and consider the second proposition — that there may now well be ‘ inadequate ones for others ’ .
  Next page