Example sentences of "[noun] [pers pn] [vb -s] us " in BNC.

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1 We are satisfied because : this is not a new doctrine , except for the good it allows us to foresee ; it is not immatura ( not yet ripe ) : the yes vote is attributable to Vatican I , to the two previous sessions , to the really profound studies of the Theological Commission , to the general development of theological studies in the Church , to the Church 's self-awareness , to ecumenism ; it is not contrary to the primacy ( reaffirmed at least 20 times ) .
2 In today 's programme he gives us an exclusive interview , the first since his heart attack four months ago .
3 In all these respects he reminds us today of Schleiermacher .
4 The rewards for those working in BP come in the quality of the opportunities it gives us for the future .
5 He has a ready supply , and despite the heavy atmosphere and flat light it carries us out to Langdale .
6 In each work she presents us with an unexpected anxiety , the memory before a human crisis .
7 But until you consider the amount of money tied up in County Farms , and the return it gives us , and the , the subsidy if you like of so few people , and you think that school ca n't have toilets and things like that , then these should all go into the decision making melting pot , and this council should not blind itself to the various options that there could be , and in those circumstances Mr I think should be allowed to explore the possibilities of the market .
8 As a theory of law it requires us to accept that there is something intrinsically moral in the legal method .
9 Summarize those needs cos there may be more than one and tell him what you 're gon na do , what is the plan of attack , when you 're gon na see the guy again and when we do our business building up , you can take it back to erm the benefits of him introducing us to other people by keeping policy charges down and increasing bonuses whenever possible , cos it 's in his benefit he introduces us to others so we do n't have to advertise , or very very rarely advertise .
10 Second he tells us that the classical paradises , which you can read about it in ancient authors , none of them are as fine as the Garden of Eden .
11 Like a spur it challenges us to find out for ourselves .
12 If it concerns your home it concerns us
13 We will present our pleas to the lady herself , and accept whatever verdict she offers us . ’
14 We need staffing , people in that area and she 's an internal candidate that 's come through , she 's done a good job right and and now she 's you know it 's not right but at the moment it gets us over a q over a quick fix
15 Though he does not actually tell us much about Eddie he tells us that Eddie could be involved in something bloody .
16 With feet of lead he pitches us into the high winds with the wisdom of a professional .
17 ‘ We must live our earthly lives in obedience to Him but also in the service of the great possibilities He gives us .
18 Which is where everything starts to fuck up , because the moment we turn our attention to Herr Mayer he tells us that the money he used to pay the Iranians was put up by the son of a well-known local citizen . ’
19 Last year , you know , totally rat-arsed. now , he 's putting up a list of all the poems he wants us to look at for next week .
20 The micro-processor , enabling previously labour-intensive work to be carried out by robots , will give us greater leisure ; the leisure industry is labour-intensive ; therefore , paradoxically , instead of reducing the number of jobs , the micro-processor has actually given us the potential to create more careers than it destroys — but only if we plan the leisure it gives us in a comprehensive and professional way .
21 On the beach or in the changing room it forces us to confront and compare size , shape and sexual attractiveness .
22 She 's invited a close friend she wants us to meet .
23 At the end of the day he employs us and if he insists , we shall have to go straight into fourth gear to prepare for it .
24 Gregory of Tours , in particular , provides evidence of unequalled richness ; on the one hand he provides us with some of the most compelling images of the power of the Merovingian Church , on the other he allows us to see behind those images , and to look at the nuts and bolts supporting them .
25 Teaming up with the Unanimous Decision Crew he talks us through a languid groove based story of how ‘ hard it is for a black man to get a job ’ , ‘ If you 're black , what 's your destination ? ’ he enquires .
26 But pause for a few moments with the two names it introduces us to — Robert Taylor , the author , and the book 's recipient , Percivall Pott , whose characteristic signature it contains .
27 Surreptitiously photographed at very close quarters he shows us moments in the sand — moments private and not so private .
28 By default he alerts us to the fact that it was the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that saw individualist arguments gravitate to the political right and become , however marginally at first , a vocabulary and strategy available to the Conservative party .
29 We normally suppose that our experience is a reliable guide to the nature of those parts of the world which we are not observing , and that in favourable cases it gives us knowledge .
30 ‘ But its situation , ’ continues Johnson , ‘ seems well chosen for pleasure , if not for strength ’ ; and then in half a sentence he gives us a glimpse of local life and activity : ‘ It stands at the head of the lake and , by a sloop of sixty tuns , is supplied from Inverness with great convenience ’ — which description immediately conjures the vessel plying up and down Loch Ness with provisions , armaments , soldiers ' wives .
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