Example sentences of "[that] we all know " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The hon. Member for Tooting ( Mr. Cox ) seems to want everything to be centrally determined and his speech reflected the dying echoes of the old-style centralised Labour party that we all knew and , at one stage , loved in our way .
2 I wanted to wire the hedgehog up to some kind of heartbeat monitor so we could run out to resuscitate it if the machine stopped beeping regularly and pronounced the continuous monotone bleep of death that we all know from hospital drama .
3 Ladies and gentlemen , he would say , Ladies and gentlemen , now it gives me very great pleasure to introduce the woman who is responsible for holding this whole show together ; the woman who first understood all those years ago that there was crying need for a place where all you lovely people could gather of an evening , the one that we all know and love , and so … would you please welcome on stage , the very lovely , the very talented … once again … our very own … and sometimes he would fade out , and not even say her name , and he would pause , he would make us wait , he would suspend his elegant hands over the keys ; and then , in that silence , he would play the first notes of the actual song itself .
4 There may be an improvement in the child 's already abundant energy or that nebulous sense of well being that we all know about but find so hard to put into words .
5 We also have the advantage that we all know each other well and have adjusted to each other 's life-styles .
6 It has particular interest in that we all know what the word means and yet none of us know what curiosity actually is .
7 In my opinion , she is relishing the martyr role , and is n't in the least embarrassed that we all know she has never tried to kill herself or do many of the things Morton has her doing .
8 Clearly , there are further topics to be placed on the sociologist 's agenda when studying teachers ' work if we are to move beyond the assumption that we all know about teachers and teaching .
9 You 've tried to do the man said , tried to face up to things , the things that we all know trigger you off .
10 ‘ I think there 's an expectation that we all know what having fun is , but many of us do n't know , ’ says John Witt .
11 Also , there are so few of us that we all know each other although living in different parts of the country .
12 Does he agree that what they need is support and proper resources so that they can carry out their work , not what has been happening over the past 12 years — continual restructuring and reforms which do the service no good and break up the comprehensive national health service that we all know ?
13 I suspect that we all know our lines — we have heard several of them repeated tonight — and , like a pantomime by a well-loved local drama group , we fishing industry Members of Parliament will perform well in this packed House .
14 Thorfinn said , ‘ Now that we all know one another , perhaps we should sit down ? ’ and pulled out a stool at one end of the table for Earl Siward , as a host might , before taking the other end himself .
15 Look at the implications looking back over it when when Fire and Public Protection had produced their report , but certainly the things are and it 's quite clear that we all know this case in my particular the river has been constricted by some thoroughly bad planning decisions and development control districts and they 're paying them that the owners are paying the penalty for that erm reducing the ditches and er building over them and okay we 've got problems erm so er there are structure plan implications erm which I do n't I think we should miss and if we say that really building on a is a principle well then we should try it right into the structure plan or looking at local plans for approval that we actually look at this a little bit more carefully .
16 Now , if we take a look at Council , this Authority that we all know and love so dearly .
17 But without rationalisation Chairman we will not be able to extend those services that we all know that we want to assist people to stay in their own homes .
18 First of all I think at the end of the day that we all know a democracy never comes cheap , it 's erm , there are cheaper alternatives for administering decisions , but erm , but dictatorship does n't go well and therefore democracy will never come cheap .
19 But erm er I I I I really feel very strongly about this that we all know that democracy does n't just consist of electing a a national parliament once in five years , we all know the strength of democracy comprises that where the complex of local institutions of local bodies made up of people serving in different ways , not necessarily elected , that is what comprises democracy and it is that which is being undermined again by this measure in this in this Bill and I do say to Your Lordships that for the reasons given by both my Noble Friends er Lord and by , by the Noble Lord , Lord Lord er that there has been no demand for this
20 Now , I put it to you that it is obvious that we all know and suspect it is a false prospectus and that the sort of recovery it implies is just not on .
21 And the guy that we all know , called Dr Richard Bately , is that his name ?
  Next page