Example sentences of "we [be] [verb] more " in BNC.

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1 We are providing more support than ever before — £14 for every £10 spent in 1979 , after allowing for inflation .
2 We are producing more goods in our factories of better quality than ever before , how can there yet be a recession ?
3 Sometimes , as when a plate of a fossil shows its matrix in detail , or that of a fish shows the river where it was caught , we are given more information than we needed — though such details may help to balance the tone of the plate and thus have an aesthetic function .
4 An understanding of the processes involved in ‘ choice ’ and participation is essential if we are to include more girls , and members of other disadvantaged groups , and alienate fewer .
5 This is not a dispute in which we are seeking more pay for solicitors .
6 Within a constantly changing political , social , legal , and geographical context we are creating more records in a fluid electronic environment .
7 Erm but , we are getting more and more opportunists lately .
8 In saving agriculture , we are saving more than our own economy .
9 Science as it is presented in schools , he argues , seems irrelevant to most 13–16-year-olds , and if we are to recruit more pupils into scientific careers , then science should be shown to have some relationship to the issues that concern them .
10 There 's no way that child should have died , but you know what these famous words in real terms , in real terms we are putting more money into the Health Service .
11 General Manager Rogerson added : ‘ We are running more trains than ever with a maximum of 26 per day in the height of our season .
12 We are carrying more tonnes for PowerGen than we expected , so we must be doing something right , ’ said the Trainload Freight spokesman .
13 Today in Britain 's N H S we are spending more and more on accountants and fi financial consultants and less and less on health care workers .
14 Erm we are making more money in favour to them and our resolution is to ensure that even a , a profile of work to be carried out , so that it 's quite clear what 's been done , the time scale , the er the amount of resources that is going to be needed .
15 We are doing more functions than ever and we have also had a lot more visitors from America . ’
16 That is slim evidence of cuts in the national health service if we are treating more than half as many again day cases and 40 per cent .
17 We are securing more travel destinations each year , with more airlines using the airport .
18 It did have a central theme to it , but we 're taking more time over the next one .
19 ‘ Then to add a little spice we selected Fidelity Special Situations which has a good track record but we 're taking more of a gamble in the hope of bigger profits . ’
20 Right every time N gets bigger it means we 're taking more and more of this nine thousand five hundred .
21 Over one hundred new L reg already ordered for August the first , and we 're taking more orders everyday .
22 Well if we 're producing more of our own goods , we are importing less of somebody elses alright and if we actually become a net exporter then we 've erm closing down the markets of third country exporters right so not only do we er consume less of er New Zealand lamb than we might do otherwise , right .
23 ‘ In particular ’ said Dr Kibler ‘ we 're seeing more problems with younger players who have not fully matured physically ’ , and he warned that introducing heavier balls could make the problem even worse .
24 These are people who are enthusiastic about science that we 're transferring more enthusiasm to , to reinforce their interest in science .
25 It would have gone on to say , , that cases of food poisoning had risen by fifty percent , and then Mr Chadwick saying , ‘ It 's likely we 're receiving more notifications . ’
26 Yes , income , that 's right , incomes have risen , er , and as a result we 're consuming more goods , consuming more goods it , it followed , well not automatically , but there 's a likelihood that trade will also , will also rise .
27 We 're getting more enquiries following all the recent cuts . ’
28 Anyway , just things to bear in mind , right , is that we 're having more fixtures next year against a higher standard of opposition , overall erm
29 Not now , not next year but in the next twenty years so there are a problem with schools , there are problems , I think , with changing leisure habits er people , the way that people take their leisure has changed over the last twenty years and not always have clubs , organizations and sailing schools taken account of that in , in their programme , especially with youngsters and I have to say I also believe there is apathy in some clubs and other organizations , not every club has an active youth sailing scheme and I believe that any club that does n't either must be extremely popular because of its er prices of beer or , or some other reason or it may not exist perhaps in twenty years ' time , so I think it 's an ext extremely important topic brought about by the maybe , without being melodramatic , some of the stuff that we 're reading in the papers about youngsters these days but looking at it from a purely selfish sailing point of view if we 're to get more youngsters into the sport even if we 're to hold our ground we 've got to make a big effort over , over this year and , and it 's important make sure that it runs on for future years .
30 Erm so I all we 're trying to do now at the moment though is , is to , to operate from the point of view of saying look , if you actually take all these things into account , we should n't be worse than we were ultimately , once these systems have bedded in , we 're doing more checking on letters for example th than , than we w we wo n't have to once we 've checked through the first two months of auto-offs , and we 're getting used to the new reports and so on and that sort of stuff , so we expect there to be a blip , but you would expect a learning curve in anyway .
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