Example sentences of "[pron] [vb base] [subord] we [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 well I know what 's on there , it wo n't be the same , its not , it wo n't be the same songs or items , will it ? , they do n't repeat their repertoire their , there not different items I mean if we did and it was a repeat you could always wipe it out , put something on top , could n't you ?
2 But I think if we persist if the club and ourselves continue the way that we 're going those numbers will become less and less .
3 and he and erm I think if we kept if we kept that at the front of our minds ,
4 And I think if we go and have something in down by the sea and see what we 've got there I think it 'll be alright .
5 I have friends who are actively involved still , and occasionally I wonder if we stopped because there was something lacking in our marriage that we were n't aware of .
6 Erm throughout this you know since we 've since we 've been talking you you very clearly have given me erm picture of the people who own the quarries and own the and have the erm of the directories .
7 Alright , if erm , if we now so this is going to be his sort of , his opportunity cost right , his wage rate in the rural sense is going to , to opportunity cost , and the sum of the opportunity cost over time right , is going to be the present , you know if we discount that by some er , if we turn it into a present , a present value , right , the present value of that sum there , right , will determine life times income in agriculture .
8 Even if we are able to show that it is not possible for there to be people who feel as we do but have no disposition to behave as we do , or vice versa , the behaviourist way of doing this seems too extreme .
9 Of course , and if you go back to the answer Beana was giving , even within a country if you try if we try and solve other people 's problems , one is very likely , if not always , to end up with those sorts of difficulties .
10 It expresses what we mean when we say that we have our reservations or vacillate about something .
11 That 's what we mean when we say that we make cookers for cooks .
12 This example demonstrates what we mean when we say that choices are never totally ‘ free ’ but are influenced in complex ways by the socialisation process and by practical constraints .
13 That is what we mean when we say that the Labour party is advocating an envy tax .
14 When we say when we say that that we stage door club is closed it closed in the place it 's not open every evening but we do actually let it out we let it out to companies and whatever conference or companies who want a facility or meeting place something we do actually market that and we do actually ask people if they want to use it and in fact it has been taken up there .
15 We act as we do because , one way or another , we have learned from others that that is the way we ought to behave .
16 But what is it that we believe when we believe that one thing caused another , that the second was the effect of the first ?
17 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 .
18 Later reports from the IBM Corp annual meeting in Tampa , Florida on Monday stress the anger of shareholders that we forecast when we mentioned that the meeting was to be held in America 's retirement capital : ‘ IBM stock no longer provides for your old age , but it certainly hastens its arrival , ’ one irate shareholder told Louis Gerstner during the annual meeting ; some 2,300 shareholders , mostly elderly investors and current or former IBM employees , crowded into the Tampa Convention Center for the meeting .
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