Example sentences of "[Wh det] we [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Furthermore , is it not overwhelmingly likely that there are other factors involved of which we know nothing , or which we simply overlook ?
2 The point is that we can not circumnavigate or dispose of these problems by resorting to the familiar logical ploy of treating questions about experiences as if they were simply questions about the logical properties of sentences in which we ordinarily talk about experiences .
3 It means shaving away constantly at the sort of multiple objectives which we normally like to set ourselves , until one reaches an absolutely clear message of a mission and role .
4 Any of these vegetables should be briefly blanched to soften them — even lettuce which we normally eat raw .
5 ( This might sound bizarre , but it is a good way of learning to tune in to subtle energies which we normally ignore . )
6 We hope that although this is not the type of material to which we normally give space , ‘ MI ’ readers will find it a useful ‘ keep and file ’ reference during the months ahead .
7 We all surround ourselves with people who share our beliefs so that we feel comfortable , so it 's often the ‘ obvious truths ’ which we most need to question .
8 Basta , che sol tu chieda ’ has all the solemnity for which we most admire the great bass arias from Messiah .
9 This is that for your Lordships ' House to recognise such a principle would overstep the boundary which we traditionally set for ourselves , separating the legitimate development of the law by the judges from legislation .
10 The blood-red surround to the child again emphasises the raw reality of childbirth and is placed against the blue which we traditionally associate with the Madonna .
11 ‘ Ah , ’ the guide said with too perfect a smile , ‘ then you may remember , too , that the doors through which we just passed measure seven point three two metres .
12 May , 1982 , ‘ The Argentinian air force has the latest attack aircraft and missiles , which we just do not have .
13 This general question is one to which we also return , in Chapter 8 .
14 It is a fundamental assumption for structural sociology that when we are born we are confronted by a social world which is just as real — at least in its consequences for our behaviour — as other realities which we also confront .
15 While they are happy to predate on anything small enough to swallow — playing havoc with Molly fry for instance — they are not like the Bumble Bee Gobies , ( and the less-well-known Slim Mudskippers Parapocryptes serperaster which we also keep ) which will accept only frozen or live foods .
16 We admire and cherish an environment which we also depend on for food .
17 We can therefore generalize from one experiment in which short-term storage is believed to operate to another in which we also believe it to be present .
18 But the enduring constant is the spirit of man in which we also share .
19 Well there is n't actually regrettably there is so much personal debt within the City , and the problem is rising to such an extent that all the bodies that provide money advice , including for example the Citizens ' Advice Bureau , which we also fund , are overwhelmed by the numbers of people coming to them .
20 Even a skeletal list of the fundamentally important matters which we thus take for granted would be very long .
21 So I mean er I think one of the points we raised earlier is that there are , there are bits of information which we either assume or are missing so on that .
22 The investigation of the language of popfiction is here conducted , in the author 's own words , at three levels : " a level of verbal choice and organisation , a level of narrative structure , and a level at which stylistic options and devices are related to the ideologies of manliness and womanliness which we either bring to our reading or derive from it " ( p. xi ) .
23 Genetic make-up , early childhood socialisation , class divisions and inequalities of opportunity are things which we either do not know how to change , or would involve a degree of social and economic transformation which is very unlikely to be embarked on in the name of reducing crime .
24 It 's the communication vehicle which we desperately need over here . ’
25 But if you talk to them nicely you can which we mostly do .
26 And the overall groupings which we finally evolved for this book in terms of life focus also turn out to be remarkably close to the clusters of life styles picked out in an earlier American study taking just this perspective , Robert Williams and Claudine Wirths 's Lives through the Years .
27 This all implies a degree of creative intelligence and mind function which we largely overlook .
28 The facts , as we perceive them , do suggest the existence of a coordinating intelligence at work behind the scenes , possibly an aspect of that same life energy , or vital force , which we already saw as having an organizing and integrating function in the individual living organism .
29 Nothing at all about Rocky … except he s in the 17 man squad ( which we already knew ) .
30 To increase out migration will selectively erm encourage those people least able to compete probably the the the the younger section , the seventeen to twenty ei twenty four year age group which we already know are there 's a net out migration flow .
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