Example sentences of "we [adv] [vb base] the " in BNC.
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1 | And as I continued to think about how we rarely get the measure of little children , I suddenly realized why they 'd been making so much din . |
2 | Like Peking and Sian , the main streets here are spacious and tree-lined , but we rarely explore the back streets , which you see branching off everywhere , alley-ways where the people live in hovels which would make the slums of European cities appear spacious mansions — but even these alleyways look clean and well-cared for , in spite of their higgledy-piggledy mud- or wood- or brick-walled dwellings . |
3 | We rarely see the Old Testament as a whole and little attention is paid to the system of political economy which is set up under divine instruction in the Pentateuch . |
4 | Consider Billy Brace 's letter ( Letters ) which says of Gaelic : ‘ We rarely lament the loss of those languages now ’ . |
5 | We badly need the help of the public . |
6 | We effectively own the property ! |
7 | James Cropper who was at the centre of the efforts to establish a national antislavery body to work directly for emancipation declared roundly , ‘ We have no wild schemes of emancipation … we rather wish the thing may work its own way by the force of faith and the operation of circumstances . ’ |
8 | When we speak of our economic growth on the basis of market relations ( this is the ‘ meaning ’ of NEP from a certain angle ) , we thereby disprove the thesis of the opposition of socialist accumulation ( even ) to the law of value . |
9 | But the wavelength multiplied by the frequency is always equal to the velocity of light , so this decrease in wavelength has the result at the same time of increasing the frequency v. Inevitably we thereby increase the energy carried by a single photon and make its interaction with the electron correspondingly more rumbustious ( with the effect of increasing the degree of uncontrollable disturbance to its momentum ) . |
10 | We wholeheartedly condemn the Government 's policy of Non-intervention which has permitted the Fascist countries of Italy and Germany to pour into Spain vast amounts of arms , ammunition , men , whilst it has denied the Spanish Democratic Government the legal right to purchase necessary supplies to defend the State . |
11 | Er well y yes , they 'll be running at a loss right through until we eventually fix the prices for the whole programme and er hopefully the if they do it very efficiently we might make some profit . |
12 | We eventually kill the lights . |
13 | Wandering with pleasure along the Corso , the knobbly spine of the town , we eventually open the guide book , to find we have failed to focus on seven modest palaces . |
14 | also we have had promises of items on loan when we eventually open the Museum . |
15 | Basta , che sol tu chieda ’ has all the solemnity for which we most admire the great bass arias from Messiah . |
16 | Yes well the reason for that was the erm the name is to do with the way we commercially market the product . |
17 | If we entirely remove the dynamics from the model , then it is possible to generate a soluble relation for Ct and hence construct a linear convergent strategy . |
18 | We entirely accept the need to avoid a single buyer acquiring too many bus companies . |
19 | In speech , lacking these devices , we naturally expect the prosody to be called into play — but we must beware that we do not exaggerate its role . |
20 | He is far from being one of the outer world , but in reading his work we constantly feel the influence upon him of his reading of the worst English poets . |
21 | After a while , if we constantly wear the same , favourite scent , we can become immune to its charms . |
22 | ‘ If we constantly wear the same scent , we become immune to it ’ |
23 | We merely put the onus on him do n't we to say , Right if an incident should occur it gives you responsibility whether you delegate somebody to assist you to make sure that all that area , the jockeys rooms and |
24 | Much has been written about the ‘ new technology ’ methods currently being introduced throughout the newspaper and magazine industry but few individuals ever come into actual contact with the equipment and working methods they use , we merely read the end results at our breakfast table . |
25 | It generates paper in sickening profusion ; it makes unconscionable demands on the heroes of the piece , the thirteen or fourteen hundred volunteers drawn mainly from ‘ that two-handed engine ’ we pompously call the binary system of higher education … but with all its faults the system works . |
26 | The chairman of World Wide Insurance , Mr Brian Summers , told me : ‘ We greatly regret the death of Mr Davies , who was one of the unsung servants of golf . |
27 | We greatly value the close contact we have with the Junior School prefects and the Sixth Year pupils , as well as the assistance we receive from parents in a variety of situations . |
28 | We greatly appreciate the interest she is showing in our work and will value her professional guidance . |
29 | Eric Hobsbawm suggests that we patiently await the coming of better times . |
30 | I remember coming into the store one Saturday at five minutes to four , I apologised for being so late and you said to me ‘ That 's alright Sir , we only shoot the last three ’ . |