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

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1 It 's the richness of the language — that we know more filth than anybody else .
2 ‘ Now that we know British food is just about the worst in the world , ’ says Jonathon Porritt , director of Friends of the Earth UK , ‘ how ironic it is that we and other rich nations are exporting fat and sugar to starving people in Africa and Asia .
3 It is not part of Locke 's empiricism that we know these things by observation and experience .
4 Our measure of progress is that the way that we ask these questions has changed .
5 And that we proivide good quality education for students of 17 to 22 years … and it gets their attention
6 The important thing is that we go onstage feeling like a unit , rather than a bunch of individuals who happen to be playing in the same key . ’
7 The demands of multi-site projects such as the EC-funded Rhododendron project , and the Darwin Initiative , make it imperative that we install these systems as soon as funds are available .
8 The transformation which God works in our lives is that we become real people .
9 David ( Narcizo ) always says that we trust this music more than we trust our own bodies .
10 Finally then , as feminists , it is vital that we raise these issues in our trade unions , our work , our political parties and at local grass-roots level , insisting that feminist demands are incorporated into the general political strategy and so broadening the socialist perspective .
11 ‘ It is an investment in our future and it is crucial that we get good returns . ’
12 We shall look at some of them in the next chapter , but before closing this one it might be pertinent to speculate why it was in St. John 's Gospel , of all places , that we get such stress laid on the Spirit as Paraclete .
13 Erm , we are two-ply , diploid , in a sense that we get one set of our genes from one parent and another complete set from the other parent .
14 So I would first urge that we get that paper out to us as soon as possible .
15 Right so we 'll just look at the sort of er the negative side of not making the time that we get more mistakes .
16 I think what we actually want is more people who are more in tune with working people and their hopes , and their dreams and their aspirations , and tha in , in parliament , in the House of Commons than we 've got at the moment and so the motion I 'm putting forward which is to propose that we actually look at the Parliamentary Panel and make sure we get a few decent shop stewards in the House of Commons , a few people who got experience of actually being on the shop floor , a few people who got experience in the last fourteen years , that the last four Conservative governments have actually tried and defend and fight for the interests of working people right down the grass root , those are the people that we actually need in the House of Commons and we shall be looking at our Parliamentary Panel and we shall be looking at it very seriously to ensure that we get those sort of people onto that Parliamentary Panel and those sort of people into the House of Commons , that 's the best way to represent working people in Britain today and that 's the sort of contribution the G M B should be making .
17 Now because of these two problems we violate er a couple of assumptions of ordinary lease squares right , and as a result , the upshot of this is that we get biased estimates of our parameters A B C and D , right , they will be biased and also they wo n't have the minimum variants property right , they wo n't be the best estimators you , the statistics you talk about blue estimates , best linear and biased alright .
18 But I do I think that would be very useful but we 've got to make sure that we get this assessment started , so , if we do n't get round to eighth year then that 's tough !
19 Besides , it 's not absolutely essential that we get this device before leaving with the bomb — always assuming , of course , that we do leave .
20 ‘ It is imperative that we get another convoy in , and without the delays this first one experienced . ’
21 Let us say that we get 40 miles per gallon overall , and pay nearly £2 a gallon .
22 It 's important that we get these things .
23 Come evening time , after half-a-dozen more flickering Trek videos and prior to the conference party , I suggested that we get some wine/beer from the off licence .
24 No , I do n't mean marathon running , although I am certain that the spectators of the original run from the Battle of Marathon to Athens would be astonished to learn that we regard such things as sports , since the man who ran the original dropped dead on arrival .
25 ‘ Secondly , that we regard public ownership not as an end in itself but as a means — and not necessarily the only or the most important one to certain ends — such as full employment , greater equality and higher productivity . ’
26 We have made it clear that we regard this scheme as flawed since it fails to provide to those who are legally aided that to which the Act entitled them , namely that solicitors they select will be properly remunerated .
27 All the pronouncements from NATO of late have been to the effect that we regard nuclear deterrents as an important part of the armoury of NATO forces generally .
28 In general , however , we have , as in Equation ( 3.4 ) and its analogues , a spectrum of relaxation times so that we write Two assumptions are now usually made .
29 I wish to move an amendment which is erm , that we defer any decision on this until the property , the director of property services has made his report to the property sub- committee on the erm , future , stroke to the organisation , which is th , the subject of his next report to property sub- committee .
30 The result is that we kill 5,000 people and maim a quarter of a million on our roads in the name of personal convenience .
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