Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [vb base] our [noun sg] " in BNC.

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31 It is to these inflation theories that we now turn our attention .
32 If we now turn our attention to the carnosaurs , like the Dilophosaurus , and the dome-headed creatures , like the grotesque Pachycephalosaurus , we can see that they had very bony skulls .
33 We now turn our attention to the second aspect of the interactional organization of messages : information structure .
34 We now turn our attention to the accompanying wind chords .
35 We now turn our attention to the third kind of operator in the UK financial system — the financial markets .
36 If we now turn our attention to the hero-literature of ancient Greece , it is notable that just about every prominent hero does battle at one time or another , and sometimes repeatedly , with Amazon women .
37 If , bearing in mind the theory of society and superego development so far advanced in this book , we now turn our attention back to the analysis of modern culture outlined in the article from which I quoted so extensively in the chapter before last , we can see that the following remarks , also from that article , take on a much greater significance in the light of the point which I made at the conclusion of the last regarding the lack of a culturally determined latency period among the Australian aborigines :
38 If we now turn our attention to the second type of conflict enumerated by Freud , that between the ego and the superego , we have already noticed that the externalization of the superego , particularly of its archaic and providential aspects , is easily possible and seemingly well under way in many societies .
39 As a first step towards writing this larger program , we now turn our attention to genes .
40 As we now contemplate our strategy for the years ahead , let us never forget that they are the people who sit huddled outside , waiting for us to get it right . ’
41 We now start our study of the economy as a whole and in the remainder of the book we consider many of the world 's most pressing macroeconomic problems — problems like persistent unemployment , rapid inflation , balance of payments difficulties , economic stagnation and unequal distributions of income and wealth .
42 We had practical help too from hotels , stores and businesses in our City Centre Parish , as well as from Scotsman Publications , and we now acknowledge our gratitude to those companies who answered our call for help .
43 We now call our account managers entrepreneurs because they are responsible for their own budgets and for how they spend and allocate their funds . ’
44 We really get our fill of Hilary Frome from young Pickerage at the moment , ’ he said .
45 ‘ We do n't spent all day in each other 's pockets , but we really value our time together .
46 Whoever might be in office , ‘ it is we , if we really understand our business who really control the situation . ’
47 We invariably start our process by trying , together with the help of younger people , to look at what the present trends of the world are likely to lead to .
48 Animal nature has analogies to human nature , and by doing our duties to animals in respect of manifestations of human nature , we indirectly do our duty towards humanity .
49 It is to this domain that we conventionally ascribe our image of self and of importance , identifying strongly with our controlled ability to articulate what appears to us to be the content of our own will .
50 The intensional level structures which we are describing here are not rules of logical combination , constrained by what may or must be possible , given the type meaning of the words which are combined ; there is any amount of evidence to this effect if we simply allow our attention to rest on it .
51 We must go into the reasons why we sometimes lose our lead [ in a technology ] and spend large sums of money on purchasing abroad equipment or technology which we are fully able to make for ourselves , often indeed at a higher quality level .
52 We again use our computer monkey , but with a crucial difference in its program .
53 I mean , you know we , we can all be very er , er liberal minded and enlightened about every body else , but when it comes to ourselves with a , and there are some exceptions and , and , and you 've identified yourselves here amongst this hundred , but a lot of us if were absolutely honest we would like to change things I mean one way or another and we all do various things , I mean we certainly wash our hair and people say you do n't need to wash your hair , if you leave it long enough it 'll wash itself , I do n't know what else you do maybe you shave bits of this and wax bits of that and
54 We actually inhibit our speech patterns by worrying what others are thinking of use .
55 Well erm I 'll tell you what it is we , we actually build our business by word of mouth and it er these sort of introductions means that we rarely advertise erm and the money saved can be used to benefit policy holders such as yourself which sometimes means that it can reduce charges and erm increase bonuses wherever possible .
56 We identify a stretch of language as a text partly because it is presented to us as a text , and we therefore do our utmost to make sense of it as a unit , and partly because we perceive connections within and among its sentences .
57 and we too hold our breath and push a way
58 Central to his description of dreaming is the suspension of volition , " and in respect to the mind , we never exercise our reason or recollection in dreams ; we may sometimes seem distracted between contending passions , but we never compare their objects , or deliberate about the acquisition of these objects … "
59 " We never exercise our reason or recollection in dreams " ( see Chapter I ) .
60 We say more about the resolutions in the explanatory notes but if you have any queries about them please telephone our Shareholder Enquiry Office where the staff will be able to help you .
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