Example sentences of "that we [modal v] [verb] [pron] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The garment is so peculiar that we might dismiss it as a quirk of the rhyton carver 's imagination , but for the fact that it features again on a seal impression from Agia Triadha , where the rhyton also originated .
2 Come that we might see you in the people of every race , and commit ourselves to the hope that we celebrate our life together in true community and justice .
3 and erm sorry the poem the new poem , but that we 'll spell it with a will be correct .
4 ‘ Tell that brother of yours that we 'll catch him in the end so he might as well give himself up . ’
5 We get quite used to our domestic dog actually bringing us sticks and balls so that we may throw them for our four-legged companion to retrieve .
6 Furthermore , as far as skinhead paraphernalia is concerned , is n't Morrissey telling his fans ( supposedly alienated from society 's mainstream ) that we may have something in common with the frightening skinheads ?
7 Those of us who enjoy them need only a name for each condition , so that we may discuss them in expectation and in recollection .
8 Come to us , God of love , that we may see you in the poor , the sick and the rejected .
9 Time and again we have put down the markers and placed on record that we would regard it as a perfectly reasonable alternative to what exists now if there were a series of companies throughout Scotland which represented the ownership of those at present employed by the Scottish Bus Group under the same conditions as at present and with the same commitment to the current level of services .
10 He placed the course in what was , to our minds , a very reasonable perspective , saying that we were here to teach our particular specialities , but obviously there would have to be give and take , in that we would adapt ourselves to the students ' needs , and they would adapt themselves in turn to the sort of thing which we felt capable of teaching .
11 The point is not that companies are ideal mechanisms for making decisions which have important social effects ( in the sense that we would choose them for this purpose other considerations being equal ) .
12 Furthermore Mr himself has said to me on more than one occasion that given the history of the situation it 's unlikely that we would get anybody of sane mind to take over the running of the two centres .
13 So we though that we would try it in general practice .
14 I have made it perfectly clear to the ferry owners in Rathlin that we shall do nothing without discussing it with them and the islanders ' development and community association .
15 We thought it was so good that we 'd do it for the old people 's home .
16 ‘ And tell the coffee ladies that we 'd like ours in , say , three-quarters of an hour ? ’
17 As I hinted parenthetically following the quotation from Clark , it seems perverse for him to insist that we must choose one at the expense of the other .
18 Erm I only want to say it is very important that we must do nothing to sort of prejudice the outcome of the consideration of the planning application environment cases sub committee , erm at a later erm stage .
19 I am not , then , when I claim that the existence of God does not need to be proved , denying that we must show it to be reasonable to believe in God .
20 There also is an empirical problem of understanding how support operates between grandparents and grandchildren , in that we must disentangle it from support given to and by the intervening generation .
21 There was so much that we used to cut it into strips and string it from the eaves to dry in the wind and sun .
22 Its original purpose was to enable us to turn our work so that we could rehang it with the plain side towards us , knit a few rows of reversed stocking stitch and then turn it back again to continue in stocking stitch or pattern .
23 See we we have an awful lot of problems , I mean , not only the question of breaking into one 's home things like , car parking or things of a very high accident risk whereas , if we had a beat officer , at least we could set up some sort of local liaison , in so much that we could tell him about our sort of problems , and perhaps between us , resolve them .
24 We had to organise it so that we could move it on a Saturday night from Manchester to Oxford and get it ready for a full orchestra , circus , and technical rehearsal on Tuesday afternoon .
25 ft informed us that he was leaving Salamanca for England on his motor bike , via Cherbourg , and that we could expect him in Bath on a certain day .
26 His alternative is what he calls an ‘ appreciative ’ stance : ‘ These appreciative sentiments are easily summarized : we do not for a moment wish that we could rid ourselves of deviant phenomena .
27 six two O twos , and we 're not going to replace it with anything , and we have an opportunity if we go for it now that we could replace them with sixteen double O fours and the projections are
28 It was all quite civilised and there were so many of us girls there that we could take it in turn to do the observations .
29 There are limits to what they can say in explaining their beliefs , the sort of limits which we tend to accept when imagining the constraints upon giving a blind person some understanding of what the world looks like ( although , as said , it would be wrong to suppose that we could communicate nothing in such circumstances ) .
30 We very much wanted him to come down to Merstham again when the weather was better , so that we could drive him round the country .
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