Example sentences of "[noun] we [vb base] the " in BNC.

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1 In this first of a series of articles designed to make you more aware of your Association we outline the overall structure of the IBOA .
2 In our thinking we follow the Perceptual maps of the world that we build up in our minds .
3 After exploring the famous City of Innsbruck we cross the Europa Bridge on our way over the Brenner pass into Italy .
4 That is why on this side we resist the proposals which come from members opposite to add to public expenditure every day of the week .
5 On the other side we hear the accusation that scientists are ‘ playing God ’ .
6 I agree with Mike that the panel has been and er he is and will continue to do , erm I am sure , erm and , and that think certainly it will apply to , ought to be extended so that it wo n't need staff , er to be need during er nineteen ninety four erm and we wanted to , to note the continuing high levels of unemployment er on this side we believe the County Council should have an economic purpose strategy anyway , this should be a very important part of it 's strategic there , the strategic planning role .
7 On this side we handle the up-goods from the American and Cape line ships .
8 But on the Continent we appreciate the woman of thirty . "
9 To justify the use of parametric methods we refer the reader to the LP for paper recycling discussed in Section 1.1 .
10 On Tuesday we view the impressive High Cross at Kidalton and visit the distillery and the round church at Bowmore , then return via Finlaggan and the private grounds of Islay House .
11 Reflecting on Down 's immediate future he adds : ‘ You have to remember that the championship is only eight or nine weeks away so the more competitive football we get the better .
12 By using verbal as well as non-verbal signals we have the chance to test our pictures of each other .
13 Bearing in mind we have the more difficult travelling but they undercut us .
14 To emphasise the difference between long-distance and short-distance sensing we coin the term aloof sensing to refer to non-intrusive measurements at laboratory distances .
15 To the stranger we present the face of control and rationality .
16 On character- and byte-oriented computers we have the freedom to use these units of storage as instruction syllables , without any of the problems of syllable addressing mentioned above .
17 If we examine the lexical units referring to other modes of perception we find the following correspondences :
18 Er locally no real troubles on the M One er if you 're heading down to Leicestershire we have the work at twenty two on the M One not really causing too many troubles but some brand new work on the go in Northants today between junctions nineteen and eighteen that 's the M Six down towards Rugby .
19 Little explicit literary evidence confirms this view of the Council ; there is for instance nothing in the pamphlet we call the Old Oligarch , written in c.425 , although in other contexts it does comment on the influence at Athens enjoyed by the wealthy and well-born .
20 This may sound a somewhat highfalutin' way of making an obvious point ; but the obvious points are often the important ones : in this tension we find the limits of experience , beyond which we locate an objective universe and within which we locate subjectivity .
21 Here we have war , war in its most appalling form , and in our distress we realise the nearness of God .
22 Through the verbal and non-verbal signals of informal or friendship relationships we acquire the social props to our identity .
23 We want the turnover we want the the input and and then er having succeeded hopefully by year three when we 've er as we 've maintained making a profit we will then look at some of the marginal sales as we would call them to er some of the smaller people .
24 In other words we see the world through another 's eyes .
25 In this chapter we use the LFS to look at the industrial and occupational distribution of temporary working .
26 In this chapter we analyse the nationalized industries , explain how they have been run , and assess their performance .
27 In the remainder of this chapter we examine the evolution and successes of UDCs , and evaluate these within the context of contrasting ( but comparable ) experience .
28 In this chapter we link the discussion of bureaucracy to the wider concern with formal organisations in general and examine the formal relations , structures and processes that exist within an organisation .
29 In the course of one chapter we find the following phrases , in this order : there seems no explanation on Darwinian grounds It is no easier to explain It is hard to understand It is not easy to understand It is equally difficult to explain I do not find it easy to comprehend I do not find it easy to see …
30 In the next chapter we consider the subject and problems of commitment .
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