Example sentences of "we [verb] in the [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | We dwelled in the fair , listened to the conflicting |
2 | We met in the early morning . |
3 | But my boss is a resilient character and when we met in the late afternoon he was bursting with his old spirit . |
4 | We met in the odd foursome and it did n't really work out . |
5 | Appropriately enough , we met in the Hominid Room of the Natural History museum , a light spacious rectangular chamber with a glass wall on one side that looks out on a grassy park . |
6 | We met in the old Majestic Hotel , where I was staying , and I asked him about his former student in Berlin . |
7 | If we pivot in the first of these , as indicated in the tableau , we obtain P3/T2 in which θ = θ . |
8 | The errors we made in the 1960s and 1970s can , and are , being corrected . |
9 | If anybody wants to comment on it , or any I think perhaps just confirm the calculation about being roughly one a day , that erm if you take the number of decisions that we made in the last twelve months , twenty one point eight percent of which were , erm , decisions to be put out by twenty six five , if we divide that by four , divide it by fifty two , and divide it by five you end up with point eight six per day , er |
10 | Well , we 've got a couple that we made in the fifties . |
11 | We lived in the same street . |
12 | Erm , but I do , I mean if we were hogging another , I mean , if we got in the new , like you just got in the new software for the Mac |
13 | I never understood why we got in the tangled bureaucratic mess of the community charge to pick up the tiny amount of 3 million out of 42.5 million people . |
14 | I think it 's along side that , behind that remember we got in the wrong lane one day and we |
15 | As we argued in the previous chapter , this profits squeeze fundamentally reflected overaccumulation . |
16 | We sit in the deep armchairs , both brooding on private thoughts . |
17 | We sit in the big room and watch some unedited footage from the ‘ Runaway ’ video . |
18 | If there 's erm For instance I 've had a situation where on a medical practice booklet because we er hand back a hundred pound for every full page that we we gain in the medical practice booklet , er it 's an encouragement for if we 're just a quarter of a half page short , er for the practice to say you know we 'll get for another hundred quid we 'd all we need to do is make a couple of phone calls and threaten erm one or two of our patients . |
19 | First we need to start with the ‘ givens ’ of the situation — the objective features of the predicament which we reviewed in the first part of the last chapter . |
20 | The religious or mystical order clearly supports the secular establishment , rather than opposing it as in some of the spirit possession cults we reviewed in the previous chapter . |
21 | Why , as urban sociologists such as those we reviewed in the last chapter argued , should a spatial or urban sociology not also be concerned with the class relations of production ? |
22 | So anyway I said , oh well get some change and I was on the point of sa I said to Margaret shall we jump in the ruddy car and we 'll get back . |
23 | Thus the question , to sharpen up the one we posed in the first chapter , is not : ‘ How can I stop myself getting ‘ like that ’ ? ’ , as if ‘ like that ’ were a chronic condition into which one slowly but permanently sank . |
24 | A roundtable discussion on the question ‘ What type of information do we need in the Middle East ? ’ dealt , among other things , with attitudes to information in the region , in view of the perception that information means power , and that access to it should therefore be restricted . |
25 | Notice that this paragraph is not only held together by the sort of unity , or development of ideas , that we described in the Great Gatsby example above . |
26 | for example , for the typical dieter we described in the last chapter , her goals for Week 1 are as follows . |
27 | As we described in the last chapter , blueprints ( some of which are not available to conscious recall ) weigh heavily among the factors which determine our motives , choices and behaviour . |
28 | The legal bond can be a useful container while partners struggle to come to terms with the ‘ me in you ’ , the phenomenon we described in the last chapter . |
29 | The closer we allow ourselves to get to another , the more we are affected and influences both consciously and unconsciously through the projective system or defence we described in the last two chapters . |
30 | Curiously , this futuristic notion returns us to one of the earliest electronic book models which we described in the original report . |