Example sentences of "[vb -s] [conj] we [modal v] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 But Scotsman Billy said last night : ‘ My wife wonders if we should get a gun .
2 The right hon. Member for Shoreham ( Sir R. Luce ) thinks that we should change the standard spending assessments .
3 He also thinks that we must develop a culture that demands certain standards from all teachers and accords high status to the few who choose to develop their teaching skills further .
4 But it so happens that we can compare the situation during the years 1070 to 1123 with a similar train of events at Canterbury just a hundred years later .
5 Now it so happens that we can make the same substitution of forms in an otherwise completely different sentence , producing an exactly parallel change of meaning :
6 And what does say about that ? says that we will keep the level of charges down in the now privately owned companies providing public utilities so there 'll be nothing for dividends .
7 Parker says unequivocally that the future of the mainframe lies with Open Edition MVS , but he says that we could see a new generation of mainframe-class systems based on multiple RISC processors , again based on a similar idea to the SP-1 and that this will be the natural place for AIX .
8 The constructivist says that we should regard the problem of how it is possible to act at will as the best philosophical and psychological road to the problem of mentality .
9 He says that we should harness the expertise of the various agencies involved in health care .
10 Mr. Wadsworth submits that we should approach the present application on the basis of those words in the introduction to section 23 , namely the court ‘ may , if they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of justice , ’ make the necessary order .
11 That depends if we can get the telly .
12 The issue really concerns whether we can capture the point where social reality actually alters so that people either side of that line have structurally different resources and social relations .
13 I am glad that the Home Secretary recognises that we must tackle the whole question of crime to get a grip of the dreadful problem of stealing vehicles , which has affected my area of Newcastle .
14 This ensures that we can supply the complete spectrum of materials to all our customers in the building trade .
15 At first it seems that we can draw a sharp distinction between perceptions and attitudes .
16 If we take this point of view , it seems that we will gain a better understanding of the history of what is usually called standard English , because we will be able to separate out those issues that primarily involve the development of standard ( prescriptive or codified ) norms from those that do not .
17 And if that happened the bill automatically falls unless we can move the closure of the debate .
18 It follows that we can form no clear notion of spatial or temporal order among existents with uncompleted life-cycles ; and this , in reality , means not at all .
19 It follows that we can describe the human transactions between students and staff that constitute the processes of higher education without mentioning ‘ the academic community ’ .
20 When a repeated eigenvalue 1 makes the characteristic matrix doubly degenerate , we know ( see ( 1.21.14 ) ) that the Sylvester expansion of the system matrix A is unc It follows that we can use the power method to find 1 ; postmultiplication by co gives in the limit , when r is sufficiently large , say s , unc We thus find 1 without difficulty ; but the determination of z11 + z22 requires further consideration .
21 It follows that we can provide the answer to a third problem , ( c ) : the successive evaluation of the reciprocals of the leading minors of a matrix A until unc is achieved .
22 This indicates that we must consider the stretching motions of both bonds together .
23 Our cupid symbol indicates that we can recommend a special room for either a special room for either a honeymoon holiday or simply for a romantic celebration break .
24 Keeping things simple , generally the safest approach , means that we 'll use a standard typeface but use it very big .
25 This means that we must examine the data carefully to see whether there is any difference in meaning between the uses with and without to , and then seek an explanation for the curious appearance of to with this sense of know .
26 That means that we must have a set-aside system .
27 The increased qualified majority voting in the Council of Ministers , to which we have agreed in the treaty , means that we must have a way of keeping our national Parliaments better informed than they are at present .
28 This means that we must acknowledge the powerful emotional expressive components even in interpersonal transactions of an apparently impersonal kind .
29 We have seen significant changes world wide and that means that we should reappraise the amount of money that we devote to the diplomatic corps and to our aid budget .
30 This means that we can tell a star 's temperature from the spectrum of its light . )
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