Example sentences of "let us [adv] [vb infin] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Let us instead sing the praises of those who get us to smile — the Hundred Funniest ( say we ) People in Britain : those indomitable men and women who help us to cackle through our tears , and who , while they do n't make the bad times any better , certainly make them hurt less .
2 And let us not forget the men of Sodom , the original buggers ( in the proper sense of that much used word ) .
3 Amid all the tales of scroungers , it said , let us not forget the deserving poor ; and its journalists located hardship cases with impeccable credentials .
4 But let us not forget the reputation for compassion in which Britain still leads the world … ’
5 Let us not forget the experience of the past 10 years , during which time we have had more experience of guillotine motions than in the whole of the previous history of Parliament .
6 Let us not have a debate across the Chamber below the Gangway .
7 That might well have been true in the early 1960s but not in the 1990s , so let us not revive a distinction which has thankfully been eliminated .
8 That might well have been true in the early 1960s but not in the 1990s , so let us not revive a distinction which has thankfully been eliminated All kinds of research in education have gone far beyond this narrow form .
9 Let us also remember the untold thousands in other countries who have died as a result of our bombs , our guns , the lands mines we have planted , the artillery we
10 Let us also remember the country of Zaire and all missionaries who were evacuated , many of whom long to return again .
11 And you are a girl , let us even say a young woman , who is a guest in my house .
12 To emphasize the point that there is no simple , necessary , deterministic relationship between the forms of religion and society let us briefly examine the religion of the Nuer .
13 Let us briefly note the dilemmas facing the electronics champions of Germany , France , Britain and The Netherlands .
14 Let us briefly consider the profiles of four hypothetical churches , whose gains and losses during a given year are represented in the bar graphs below .
15 Let us now assume the opposite case .
16 Let us now abandon the connection with a mechanical system , and treat this as a problem involving any given real matrix A , the eigenvalues and vectors for which have to be found .
17 Let us now anticipate the molar mass measurements to be described in chapter 9 and examine the osmotic pressure of a polymer solution in the light of equation ( 8.35 ) .
18 Let us now examine the notion of semantic constituent .
19 Let us now examine the characteristics , and possible effects on the formation of social collectivities , of the various aspects of the division of labour which have been identified .
20 Let us now examine the published accounts of a simplified local authority to see the effects of adopting fund accounting .
21 LET us now ascend the tower .
22 Let us now make the problem a little more complicated by assuming that only part of the disc is in an appreciable magnetic field , as shown in Fig. 4.17(a) .
23 Let us now make the question more precise , and ask whether the experience has the same effect at any time , or whether there are particular ‘ sensitive periods ’ at which it will be more influential than at others .
24 Let us now leave the Great Russians of the Kursk guberniia and move out of the hills to the south of Nikol'skaia volost' .
25 Let us now place an infinite conductor plane halfway between the charges as shown in Fig. 2.32 .
26 But let us now alter the lexis somewhat and consider the following three words in association :
27 Let us now review the essential steps in the proposed coevolutionary circuit .
28 Let us now take an equatorial section through this space .
29 Let us now dig a little deeper into this theory and try to appreciate Abelard 's thought from within .
30 Let us now follow the development of the surviving cell .
  Next page