Example sentences of "[pron] [pers pn] are [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 This is true whether the loss is small and relatively trivial or if total and of the greatest importance , such as losing through death someone we are deeply attached to .
2 However , by keeping our thoughts to ourselves we are often depriving that person of information which could be very helpful .
3 After two more appearances , during which you are inconveniently looking the wrong way , you decide to go and look for the ghost .
4 If this is not your first name , then you may give the name by which you are normally called .
5 Once again , the Regional Arts Association will know the leading amateur companies in your area , and this should certainly help you in looking for the kind of group to which you are best suited .
6 Make a list of the special words and phrases which are used , put them into sentences and weave them thoroughly into the do-it-yourself SAS mirror-practice with which you are still persevering faithfully and regularly every day .
7 What was intriguing was that after the gentleman in question had filled in his first , second and third name there was room on the form , if he felt so inclined , to tell us the ‘ forename or nickname by which you are popularly known ’ .
8 I 'd just like to I do n't think this is a strategic matter in the in in the terms which you are now defining it and indeed the issue of self containment , my understanding is only the universe is self contained .
9 Hopefully the new home which you are now considering as a prospective purchase will be suitable for your needs in every way , but it may well be that a need for some renovation or refurbishment is indicated from the surveyor 's report or that you will wish to make improvements or alterations of your own .
10 It is important to be honest with yourself so that you can learn to match yourself reasonably accurately with jobs for which you are genuinely suited .
11 When you have made an initial assessment of your strengths and weaknesses you will find it easier to recognize work for which you are genuinely suited .
12 You know you are not wasting your time because this is a job for which you are genuinely suited and which you would like .
13 REFUNDABLE DEPOSITS — on self catering holidays , which you are usually asked to leave with the reception of the apartments , to cover any possible breakages during your holiday .
14 This clock has several buttons on it which you can press to indicate the kind of activity in which you are currently engaged .
15 The only paper on your desk should be that on which you are currently working and material waiting to receive your attention for the first time .
16 It suggests the need to keep our distance , especially from those bodies of thought to which we are most drawn .
17 We have oil in the North Sea which we are just wasting , we have gas which we get from the North Sea which we do n't quite know what to do with it .
18 In Appalachia , as in other areas of the world which we are increasingly becoming aware of , there has been a growing pressure for small-scale hill farmers to diversify their income with non-agricultural work , or else to sell out and move due to the increasing financial burden of trying to make ends meet .
19 This is a sample of four hundred which we are busily engaged in turning out , and a type of railway carriage that in time will succeed nearly all the present main line thirds of our system ’ .
20 Galleries ( unless they are in Paris , where the rules are different ) and most monuments , unless they are churches , to which we are both addicted , are out .
21 Er and and therefore er unless we are changing the basis of the calculation of the housing need thereby the basis of which we are thereby judging how we meet the requirement .
22 to distinguish them from the signs by which we are already combining elements of Q. The new symbols are sufficiently unfamiliar to remind us of their defining role but sufficiently similar to + and .
23 None that would not result in greater violence , greater bloodshed than that which we are already witnessing . ’
24 There is a necessity for us to behave like this in order to cope with the informational complexity with which we are perpetually faced — we ‘ know ’ something works so we do it , bracketing off the rest of the world until it becomes clear that there is a need to change our basic beliefs .
25 A small example of this , which we are perpetually living within the north east is the following .
26 Material now with The Observer — which we are still checking — suggests that there may well have been a group hostile to Sir Harold Wilson ( and hostile to leaders of the Liberal party ) extending far beyond a ‘ faction of MI5' .
27 It can not be learnt from experience , and so must be something with which we are innately endowed .
28 ‘ There is a subtle way in which we are never given quite the full authority , never quite the full credit , never quite the full respect , ’ said one woman working for a big firm .
29 As we think about it , a major cause of personal unhappiness in our lives arises from the ways in which we are quickly aroused to emotional resentment and prejudice against other people .
30 ‘ In my judgment , in the class of documents with which we are now faced there is an overwhelming bias in favour of the public interest being served by the disclosure of those documents and that , therefore , there is no justification for creating a new class of privileged documents which would be the effect of extending the class in respect of which Neilson v. Laugharne [ 1981 ] Q.B .
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