Example sentences of "[pron] we [adv] [verb] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 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 .
2 ‘ 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 .
3 Within this hospital all aspects of operation and service provision were recently subject to an audit by the King 's Fund from which we subsequently received accreditation .
4 Our contribution to the liberation of Kuwait ( and , during the 1980s , to the protection of the Falkland Islands ) ; our longer term contribution to the success of NATO and the collapse of the Warsaw Pact — these are matters in which we rightly take pride .
5 Now we we just mentioned Tarmac 's Tarmac 's objectives let's just go through them er after the course you should be able to make clear logical and well organised case presentations , fine .
6 When we normally when we draw it we normally put North going straight up the page , so each person , or each ship , or whatever it is
7 We finally reach what we laughingly call civilization , we finally reach a telephone which is capable of handling transatlantic calls , I finally get my turn in the queue , I finally get through to home , and you 're out .
8 On the basis of the evangelising role of Judas Thomas , Dr Herman Koester speaks of a Thomasine tradition , in contrast to the Pauline tradition of what we today call Christianity .
9 So was the whole epistle an elaborate begging letter , or was it voicing a loss of nerve , a fear of life , an attack of what we now call angst ?
10 Most of their important critical texts , Edwards remarks , are theoretical , in that they prompt fundamental reflections about the basic nature of writing , even if , ‘ One notices about such writing that it does not necessarily offer itself as theory , that it is directed towards what we now call literature and not towards something else . ’
11 Great Yarmouth & Caister , Norfolk 's senior club , was founded in 1882 and here was coined the term ‘ bogey ’ for what we now call par .
12 But this codification , or structuration of meaning , applies only to meaning narrowly , though centrally , defined as conceptual or logical meaning — what we earlier called SENSE .
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