Example sentences of "we [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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31 ‘ But we can take heart from the Celtic and Leeds results and carry a lot of optimism with us into the first leg in Germany .
32 Life has changed radically since then and fresh thought is necessary to carry us into the 21st century .
33 Again after the middle ten lines there is another break which takes us into the last section of the poem with the words ‘ at last ’ .
34 This discussion has led us into the third and perhaps most important question : since the assumptions will generally be untrue , how robust are the results to minor modifications of the assumptions of the model ?
35 This leads us into the next stage of whole-healing , namely diet .
36 Stoke boss Lou Macari was more subdued as he admitted : ‘ It needed a little spark of magic up front to get us into the next round , but we did n't have that spark tonight . ’
37 The European Commission have agreed an action programme that will take us into the next century and this is despite the attitude of the present U K government .
38 We have got the right Prime Minister and he must lead us into the next election . ’
39 He wanted to bring us into the twenty-first century .
40 This trap is the Devil 's second snare and is the one he sets if he fails to catch us with the first one .
41 One of the Taï chimpanzee mothers , Ricci , was kind enough to provide us with the first record of observable active teaching ( acceptable to a psychologist ) in a non-human animal in the wild .
42 And that leaves us with the second alternative .
43 The what question provides us with the next guideline :
44 Perhaps if you wish to add questions , it might be helpful if you could circulate them amongst the 4 of us before the 26th .
45 He did n't catch us until the last peak , Creag nan Damh , where a number of ridge-walkers were gathered , basking in the delight of the afternoon and resting on their laurels after a mammoth expedition .
46 It takes us from the 19th century through to the 1930s and 1940s and the pioneering work of a number of embroiderers , in particular Constance Howard , who in 1951 was invited to make a large-scale work for the Festival of Britain .
47 Because , about a week before John drew our attention to that matter of concern , I had prayerfully chosen a theme for tonight , based on the set gospel — the passage that has just been read to us from the first chapter of John .
48 Most of my new friends were paras , and we used to sit around listening to our Sergeant-Major , who had been seconded to us from the 3rd Battalion after an exemplary performance in the Falklands .
49 In each of Jesus ' beatitudes , God 's blessing comes in the first line , and is then followed by the effect of this blessing on us in the second line .
50 ‘ Chelsea worked hard and they were better than us in the second half . ’
51 Our job is to go over there and come back with a result which keeps everything alive for us in the second leg at Parkhead . ’
52 They were tremendous , and outplayed us in the first half .
53 The rough had been allowed to get really high and that was n't good news for us in the first round .
54 We had it organised so that when people contacted us in the first instance , we gave them a menu of mods that we would do , depending on what the customer wanted .
55 But the way Wycombe came back at us in the first game should serve as a warning that it will not be easy . ’
56 ‘ Villa totally outclassed us in the first half and we were extremely lucky only to be a goal down .
57 First , how dare she assume that our main goal is to walk , without consulting us in the first place .
58 Whilst we recognise that conditions favoured us in the first quarter in that weather-related losses were comparatively light , the worldwide nature of the improvement , together with encouraging indications so far in the second quarter , lead us to believe that the worst is behind us and that trends will continue to improve .
59 Er , yes , it 's a requirement for the actual length of the contract on us in the first place but the second point is that , in the tender documents , we 've actually asked all the contractors to price all the different permutations , whether it 's seven cuts , eleven cuts , hundred millimetres or a hundred and fifty millimetres .
60 He speaks directly to us in the first person and he expresses something very like fear and even self-pity , the distress of the poet , seeing himself as a kind of natural victim , and it may be the distress of the puritan living on after the Restoration and afraid of the wild route , which is Charles the Second 's court , though I think we can be a little sceptical of this and we certainly do n't know with sufficiently accuracy when Paradise Lost was written .
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