Example sentences of "we [vb base] [coord] " in BNC.

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1 To the extent that we isolate and concentrate on phonic rules we seem to encourage only awareness of the surface features of written language .
2 Narrow the aperture of the microscope and then we shall have as accurate a knowledge of the photon 's direction as we please and thus the uncertainty in the momentum transferred to the electron will be controlled .
3 We rededicate and commit ourselves to the highest standards in communication as we endeavour to work for a more just , viable and sustainable society now , and in the future .
4 We 've trying showing her that we do n't mind when we lose but it does n't seem to work work .
5 Before sleeping I wonder what Pascal had in mind when he wrote in the Pensées : ‘ Time heals griefs and quarrels , for we change and are no longer the same persons .
6 Thus , to solve AP1 , we change and to K and start from the optimal solution of AP0 .
7 There was no more talking from the Germans , and no more mortaring , the remaining part of the night passed fairly quickly with no further signs of tiredness as we lay and listened .
8 They stitched up my face , very crudely , and then we rang a friend of this girl , who drove us back to her house and we lay and took pain-killers .
9 From the moment that La Pietra 's anchor was safely biting ( again , watch those mooring chains ) , a superb air of idleness overtook everyone on board , so much so that no one could be bothered to put up the awning and we lay and baked in the sweltering afternoon heat .
10 Located in a former wool warehouse , the museum highlights how we perceive and use colour .
11 Nevertheless , the internal processes which underlie the way we perceive and think must be of relevance to an understanding of the way sign language works for deaf people .
12 The main thesis of the interactionists was that the ‘ official ’ application of these particular labels ( via agencies such as school-teachers and police ) had profound consequences for the persons so labelled , and for the way we perceive and understand crime and deviance .
13 While these means of human communication are fundamental to our culture , other technological means of communication such as television , radio and computers have become so powerful and specialized that they can greatly influence how we perceive and accept new information .
14 What we perceive or what another species perceives ?
15 Since dictionaries also contain information about the orthography ( i.e. spelling ) , phonology ( i.e. pronunciation ) and semantics ( i.e. meaning ) of words , terms such as ‘ mental dictionary ’ , ‘ internal lexicon ’ or ‘ mental lexicon ’ have been used to refer to the internalised system of knowledge we use when we perceive or produce words .
16 Can not concede that it had been possible and neither will shift in how we communicate and view the place of the Royals in our society and what the are and how those P R shifts a phrase in terms of let's make ourselves more public , let's make ourselves more accessible , have resulted in that because their very their very accessibility is the those kind of radio programmes to happen .
17 External factors must affect the timing of particular events and the points at which we highlight and are particularly proactive about specific issues .
18 The closest we get together is when we dance and when he slaps me on the arse and that 's about it .
19 Some of us constantly tell stories where we depict ourselves as having the qualities we secretly think we lack or that others need reminding of .
20 The darkness we hide and deny
21 Apart from caffeine ( which does have a small effect in speeding up the metabolism ) no substance we eat or drink was proved by scientific methods to have any realistic effect in speeding away our surplus fat .
22 but because our fluid levels change from day to day according to what we eat or drink , they sometimes give a misleading reading .
23 We no longer have to worry about what we eat or drink or wear , for we will know his provision .
24 More and more sprays and chemicals have been used on the food we eat and the land on which it is grown and ingenious methods of preserving the appearance of freshness have been devised .
25 Even if we eat and drink well , we become sluggish inside without exercise to stimulate the metabolism .
26 The sort of synthetic chemicals that we eat and drink are described in Appendix VI , p 305 .
27 As well as our family history , sex and age , we must also consider how physically active we are , the amount of stress we have to endure , whether or not we smoke , what we eat and , very importantly , whether or not we are overweight .
28 We have suggested that ‘ diata ’ means a way of living ; it means taking a holistic viewpoint on the food we eat and the exercise our bodies need .
29 This , along with the increasing use of biocides ( herbicides , pesticides and fungicides ) in food-crop production , and factory-farming methods of rearing livestock ( with increasing reliance on antibiotics , hormones and other drugs ) , has reduced the quality of the food we eat and has probably rendered much of it actually harmful .
30 We 'd like some freedom in what we eat and drink — yes , and we 'd like an alcoholic drink too .
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