Example sentences of "in [adj] [noun pl] we " in BNC.

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1 In strong winds we do n't want beginners to be overpowered and so we reduce the sail area , that 's known as reefing .
2 We then all sit down together and discuss these various options over and over again until the board has reached a position of understanding of where in broad terms we think the strategy of the individual business should fit .
3 I think in broad terms we can say that er , Les Echo comparatively did better than the F T.
4 In technical terms we say that Socinus rejected the ‘ forensic ’ idea of salvation .
5 in life-supporting mysteries we share ;
6 In social situations we can ‘ act out ’ our political struggles to make transitions from immature to mature relationships .
7 Since we all experience all four life-positions at different times and in different situations we can at least increase the frequency of OKness .
8 In different situations we write and speak differently .
9 Yet in public cinemas we , the customers , watch film in the shadowy company of an anonymous crowd , each one of whom , like us , lives a life of which cinemagoing is but a part .
10 However , when we look at continuous speech in English utterances we find that these tones can only be identified on a small number of particularly prominent syllables .
11 In Chronic Diseases we are told that when giving remedies in solid form i.e. solid form i.e. granules or powders dry on the tongue , Hahnemann found that remedies prepared with more than two shakes were too strong so stayed with two strokes for consistency ; but during the last years since I have been giving every dose of medicine in a solution , divided over fifteen , twenty or thirty days and even more , no potentizing in an attenuating vial is found too strong , and again I use ten strokes . ’
12 Thus the gist of Spinoza 's argument , for example , is that whereas in ordinary circumstances we may indeed find it useful and necessary to distinguish between essential and accidental properties , metaphysically such a distinction can not be upheld .
13 This defamiliarized perception of words which in ordinary circumstances we fail to notice is the result of the formal basis of poetry .
14 Although for practical purposes in ordinary situations we use language as if it were transparent and as if meanings and intentions existed prior to it , literature , in its freedom from any referential obligation , demonstrates the supremacy of language over all other activities .
15 Wordsworth rewrote Guilt and Sorrow to conform to this teaching , and in Lyrical Ballads we are invited to contemplate The Dungeon and The Convict from a Godwinian viewpoint ; criminals are to be re-educated and placed in surroundings conducive to this end .
16 In appropriate cases we should advise the client to seek an early discussion with the London Stock Exchange or Takeover Panel on potentially contentious issues .
17 It expressed the feelings of many with its claim : " In moral terms we are creditors ; and for that we shall pay $140 million a year for the rest of the twentieth century . "
18 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 .
19 Now as a result of that , we always recognize there will be a loss to Shropshire County Council , because we 've benefited from the previous distribution , and as far as we can see in real terms we 've lost about a hundred and thirty thousand as a result of that move of a specific grant into distribution through your revenue support grant .
20 That side has improved and in real terms we have n't had to spend much in the past two or three years .
21 In the same way as in previous analyses we divided the men according to whether or not the placental weight was above 1.25 pounds ( 567 g ) .
22 In previous chapters we have seen how the ancient manor of Combsburgh had been partially enclosed as early as the fourteenth century , especially in the areas close to the market town , and how the bulk of the field structure had been established by the late sixteenth century .
23 In previous chapters we have seen how our views of the nature of time have changed over the years .
24 In previous chapters we have discussed tax incentives , competition policy , and industrial policy .
25 In previous instalments we took our faltering first steps into the world of connectivity , that buzzword of the nineties .
26 In previous studies we have shown that in the colon of non-methanogenic human subjects , significant populationsof sulphate reducing bacteria exist .
27 In previous sections we have contrasted the cereal-packet image of the family in modern Britain with the different sorts of arrangements and structures that occur over the family life cycle .
28 In previous lives we have been both male and female , both bad and good .
29 In previous Lectures we have examined the incidence of taxation by factors or classes we have asked whether a tax is borne by those receiving capital income or those with wages .
30 As in previous years we shall conduct a nationwide advertising campaign in the early autumn to encourage people to complete and return the electoral registration form .
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