Example sentences of "we [vb base] [pers pn] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 When grave breaches of the convention occur , we raise them frequently , and directly , with the Israelis .
2 we perceive it simultaneously ,
3 We bring them home , kill them , and put them on a whitethorn bush .
4 We bring them inside in the bad weather .
5 As for heaven and hell , well , Joe , as I see it we make them both ourselves . ’
6 Unless we make it trivially true that gold is malleable , by explicitly including malleability in our idea of it , we can perceive no connection between the ideas of gold and malleability ; our observation and experiment do not tell us that gold must be malleable ; we have no knowledge that it is .
7 It gives credibility to the particular choice we as a self-defining ‘ human ’ group have made , and reinforces the validity of that choice by obscuring the fact that we make it voluntarily , rather than have it imposed on us by scientific laws which are unquestionable and necessary .
8 But we make it just on beer .
9 We make it absolutely on the phone .
10 Are we going to prepared to start that then , I 'll say we started , I make it , I make it dead on twenty five to now , but if we go by that clock , and if everybody goes by that one it 's probably easier , because that 's between twenty five to , so if we make it about eighteen minutes past .
11 ‘ The Single Market demands that we define Europe , not the UK , as our domestic market and that we make it as easy for a customer in Turin , Munich or Nice to buy from us as one in Coventry or London . ’
12 In fact what young children demand of us is not that we dilute the work , but that we make it more exciting , more tightly focused .
13 It was important to us in developing a new system now that we are very much of a worldwide supplier of accounting solutions , that we make it truly useable in all countries of the world .
14 It is a practical issue because by taking information out of the analogue world , the ‘ real ’ world , comprehensible and palpable to human beings , and translating it into the digital world , we make it infinitely changeable .
15 For each c ε J we define the value of f at c to be the element unc We denote it briefly by f(c) and refer to the process of obtaining f(c) from f in this way by the ill-chosen but universally familiar expression " substitution of c for x in f " since on the face of it we have just replaced every occurrence of x in f by c .
16 It is no wonder we hate it so .
17 The issues raised are no less relevant to the formation of an appropriate EC policy and so we review them here .
18 They know that we send them straight to the cells at An Dap now , no matter how badly they injure themselves .
19 We send them away to school — have to , living in the depths of the country .
20 And all we say is that we pay extra commission if we send you away but it is against er against our principle and even er economics to send people that far away .
21 Ring the flat , will you , Myra , and ask … no , tell Dana we expect her here in an hour for a rehearsal ?
22 ‘ We 'll write him stating , ‘ Since you obviously know nothing about English literature , we expect you never to quote from it again' . ’
23 Okay , I think you both recognise that we 're gon na have to make , but we realise it then , in the case of horses there are only ten possible ,
24 We want them here . ’
25 We want big changes and we want them quickly , but we can not see clearly enough how to set to work .
26 There seems to be a law in human behaviour that people , in the end , get what they want , and there can be little doubt that Eliot would not have acquired the eminence which he now enjoyed unless on one level he had sought it : he said , in an address delivered during this period , that " … things sometimes become possible if we want them enough . "
27 We want answers — and we want them now !
28 We want positive policies , and we want them now .
29 We want him here !
30 We want him here , we do n't wa , we do n't want
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