Example sentences of "[conj] we [adv] [verb] [pron] [prep] " in BNC.

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31 But we never saw them in our house .
32 I once saw a painted picture of something like it in the Rockefeller Centre — must have been worth a million dollars or more — but we never had anything like that , so that mountain was my art , something beautiful and eternal .
33 But we never touched them at that time .
34 Churchill was quick to repudiate the Munich agreement , but we still remember it with shame . "
35 But we always encouraged them at our house by putting out tempting bowlfuls of soggy bread and milk .
36 The picture of settlement development in the landscape , then , is a dynamic picture of great complexity , great age and constant change , but we only see it at one time .
37 But we usually work it into the show format somewhere , rather than make it a part of the news .
38 It was a small boost , but we certainly needed one after all we 've been through . ’
39 But we hardly see you at all these days .
40 ‘ Hearing ’ is not really the right word for this faculty , because we immediately relate it to our own highly specific sense of hearing .
41 Actually it 's come to a point where as Palestinian women in this country whenever we hear the word feminism , it 's very negative to us because we immediately identify it with Western feminism .
42 ( Actually , it is Oxford University Press , but we can be sure of this only because we already know something about this publisher . )
43 Quite important , because we only give them for buildings which the public can see .
44 Do n't worry if you 've not been told , it 's very new , and the managers actually over this week and last week have been before the Group Managers effectively having the last bits of training done and workshops before we really launch it to the field .
45 When we really get something from the ‘ street ’ you ca n't stand it , can you ?
46 As we have already seen by juxtaposing Sonnets 35 and 70 , after we have read a poem in which the attempt at exculpation is exploded by the Poet , either by irony or by direct criticism , when we subsequently read one in which the exculpation is made again but with no recoil on itself , then the second poem seems hollow .
47 But who can tell the damage we do to our writing voices when we roughly silence them for long stretches ?
48 ‘ While researchers can as yet give us no clear answers as to what this signifies ’ he said , ‘ it is probable that the brain will be affected by the chemical working environment as we nowadays know it in factories , office buildings with an unhealthy internal climate and polluted city air ’ .
49 In winter plumage ( as we mostly see them in Shetland ) they are brown waders with a ‘ scaly ’ appearance , a little larger than redshank .
50 Designed for glide ratio rather than aerobatics , the paragliders nevertheless can teach the foil-kite designer something , just as we strongly suspect they in turn , had already learned from the Flexifoil .
51 Which was good news for START ( Skin Treatment and Research Trust ) as we also asked you for a donation to help START in their research into replacement skin for series skin problems .
52 We did n't mix — the Forces and the students — as we really had nothing in common , but it was a reassurance to see them going about their daily business , as an indication that one day we would all be able to revert to peacetime pursuits .
53 The silence — for the sound of birds and sea adds up to silence as beautifully as we ever know it in the noisy world of today — together with the sweetly moving air , and the scents of thyme and bell heather and sun-warmed bracken , all combined to distil something very potent .
54 Our pattern will be displayed as we originally designed it in the Fair Isle option , but we are about to make some changes .
55 As we now know something of the appalling story of his hounding by cultural officialdom , the raucous irony of the middle works and the bitter blackness of the last become entirely comprehensible .
56 ‘ Barn owls ? ’ he said ; ‘ well , they might be an' all as we only close them at night .
57 In terms of the user interface , we have an X emulator and controller , XEC as we fondly know it by , erm in order to talk to the user through the users desktop device .
58 Tony Soper was Nature 's early-riser and this programme suggested it is something of a habit with him , for we also saw him in the Falklands carrying out an investigation into whether the war — or was it just a conflict ? — had upset the wildlife there .
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