Example sentences of "[noun pl] [that] we [vb base] [verb] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Well looking at the individual breeds of animals that we 've got here , tell us about the basic breed line that you you keep on the farm here .
2 It 's only thanks to the efforts of walkers that we 've got so far . ’
3 Sometimes the losses that we experience come so quickly one after the other that they become almost indistinguishable .
4 Now , those of you who have not been able to watch a television set may not be aware of the really remarkable performances that we have seen here at Royal St. George 's on this beautiful English summer 's day .
5 Only when you can see words that we 've got now that adapted from words then .
6 The devolution proposals that we have seen thus far would damage that union and separately damage Scotland , England and the whole of the United Kingdom .
7 In the long term , that might be a more effective way of encouraging investment than some of the short-term proposals that we have heard today .
8 Er we 've done the same for Renault Trucks in northern France and in Dunstable , brought , brought the unions together simply through the contacts that we 've made here in Portsmouth .
9 Although some of these community norms that we have mentioned above may be recognized by outsiders as regional or social markers , many others are better described as internal : they mark social differences inside the community .
10 Given our commitments to the programmes that we 've set forward and given our commitment to the council tax payer , remember that person again not mentioned today
11 To celebrate the centenary , we shall be having a lighthearted look at the university , and also some of the programmes that we have presented so far — the bits that went right , and some of the bits that went wrong .
12 Pornography means more than most people would have us believe , but the word has become so weighed down with negative associations that we tend to shy away from it .
13 ‘ Before you return , will you be able to explain the mysteries that we 've experienced here ? ’
14 Within the couplets that we have examined here , we can affirm , the relationship of the two lines is its unpredictable .
15 Just a very brief comment , perhaps summing up the and commenting on the various contributions that we 've heard so far .
16 They come up to meetings which erm , this goes on to say determine not to miss a single spiritual meal both private study , meeting attendance are urgent for all , there 's nothing new here brothers it 's all things that we 've heard before and this is why sometimes we can sort of nod off because we , we sort of think well I 've heard all this before , follow theocratic ways , procedures and policies not always easy to do , but it can be done , recognizing the organization that Jehovah is using keep awake by finding your place in God 's arrangement that is n't that little corner up there , by the way , we 're not talking about that one , but finding our place where we can work for Jehovah wholeheartedly do not quibble about assignments and arrangements I think we 're all guilty of that at some time are n't we ?
17 Two or three things that we need to decide here today and that 's the purpose of these discussions .
18 There are still many specific things that we have to do here .
19 But one of the things that we have discovered over twenty year is the only way you will get people to come into that brochure is to make absolutely certain before you go and see them is
20 Secondly , a failure to perceive the pattern may also occur because we lack within our theoretical base the conceptual framework that would enable us to grasp the structure that is potentially available , given the observations that we have made already .
21 Erm naturally enough you would n't expect me to agree with Miss that erm the figures that we 've put forward are against the regeneration strategy .
22 And the reason I say it , and the reason I labour the point , is that I think amongst the problems that we 've encountered particularly in budget review is to have chief officers and their staff producing reports in which they have a very clear vested interest .
23 So many of the problems that we have to solve just have nothing at all to do with real life .
24 You could 've let us use some of that eight , over eight million pounds that we have stuffed away , set aside to actually promote our social housing programme .
25 Given the theories that we have explored above we can suggest that the manager needs to :
26 We might just as well ask why , when we try to recall visually some period in the past , we find in our memory just the few meagre arbitrarily chosen set of snapshots that we do find there , the faded poor souvenirs of passionate moments .
27 It is not , however , a property in the same sense as we have used the term up to this point , since it is a second-order property ; that is , it is a property of the other two relations that we have sketched so far ( and only of these ) .
28 Yeah all the work experience that I did all four placements that we 've done so far .
29 Pressure refers to the subjective corollaries that we have met before : rush , confusion , uncertainty and anxiety .
30 The final two factors that we wish to consider here seem to have more influence in the USA , although there are signs that they are becoming increasingly important in the UK .
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