Example sentences of "let we [vb infin] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If you ca n't get more heat up there , let us move the games room down a few floors . "
2 Let us waste no time in sterile litanies and nauseating mimicry .
3 ‘ But come … let us feed the fish .
4 Let us clear the alternatives out of the way ; while they are often brought into discussions on the best methods of sharing knowledge with undergraduates , they have but limited scope , and there is no doubt that you must learn to handle lectures as the first step towards a fruitful co-operation with the staff at your college .
5 Let us picture a girl entering through the impressive doors of the New York Public Library .
6 Let us analyse the fruit flies experiment more carefully .
7 Now let us review the symbols we have learnt to use in our " Set Language " .
8 Let us chart the way by which we arrive at the Fundamental Principle .
9 Let us assume a situation where the owner has a fear of low-flying aircraft .
10 Let us assume the player is unsure where to begin ; he knows only that his chord playing is below par and wishes to improve it .
11 Let us assume the client only has £70 in retirement and works pensions .
12 So you either either sell back to our sixteen units of poles and let us stay the night , or come back again tomorrow .
13 As the lesson continued ( ’ And they said : ‘ Go to , let us build a city and a tower whose top may reach unto heaven ’ ’ ) , the results of our expulsion from that linguistic Eden were wittily demonstrated .
14 Let us confront the matter .
15 Let us give the report no more publicity , it does not deserve it .
16 Turning now to the representatives of old age who actually believe age is an automatic disqualifier , let us scrutinise the sorts of replies , among which this was typical : ‘ Capability should be the main criteria ( sic ) , but 70 years of age should be the limit . ’
17 Let us go a pickin' nuts , fol de ray , to Glastonbury Fair , a tiddle dum ay .
18 With the sexes thus reunited in the obscure origins of the word ‘ Hooligan ’ , let us pay a find visit in our tour of these troubled streets and pop in to see Mrs Jenkins and her family of Bean Street , South London , on the occasion or that fateful Bank Holiday .
19 ‘ On second thoughts , let us finish the business in hand . ’
20 ‘ First , let us forget the murders — Selkirk , Ruthven , Irvine and now Oswald .
21 Let us await the outcome of your reunion with this boy you love . ’
22 To drive this point home , let us leave the Zande for a moment and consider the following experience of a research student working in the Cameroon Republic .
23 One candidate is the duet ‘ Come let us leave the town ’ — the first vocal number in the theatre score , though it is not in the 1692 word-book : it is the first piece of ‘ new musick ’ in Q1693 .
24 We have already discussed Act 1 , in which Q1692 contains no cue for ‘ Come let us leave the town ’ and the Drunken Poet scene .
25 For the moment let us ignore the exchange rate and concentrate on changes in the rate of interest .
26 Let us start the analysis .
27 Let us choose a captain , and go back to Egypt . ’
28 ‘ Come , ’ they say to one another , ‘ Let us build ourselves a city , and a tower with its top in the heavens , and let us make a name for ourselves , lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth ’ ( 11.4 ) .
29 So let us make a start .
30 Let us make a civilisation , where the sacred
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