Example sentences of "[noun] [prep] [noun] [subord] we " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We see the importance of Hobbes for Oakeshott when we appreciate Hobbes 's achievement in effectively rejecting rationalism with his replacement of reason by will as the foundation of political authority .
2 Predation between invertebrates if we confine ourselves in the macro sense and exclude zooplankton feeding invertebrates is mainly due to mobile forms attacking and feeding upon sessile forms .
3 There would be far more activities for Jennifer than we could ever hope to provide for her here . ’
4 Together with other departments , the Department of Public relations , as the Information Office was now called , was asked to submit its plans for reconstruction when we should get to Burma .
5 We get a lot more requests for funding than we can fund , and we have to develop priorities .
6 ‘ We want to free as much money for programmes as we can . ’
7 People did n't have money for taxis so we took limousines .
8 Cla some of class seven enjoyed the story that much story about seals before we came in .
9 The British commander , Brigadier Andrew Cumming , 45 , said : ‘ This is a great boost for morale as we enter the last few furlongs of the first Operation Grapple tour . ’
10 I 've never heard so much talk about health as we do nowadays .
11 and I do n't want to , I do n't want to get involved with a lot of money that we 'd have to outlay for upkeep until we 've gone into it thoroughly .
12 In terms of hard cash , we 've applied to the Community Council of Great Britain , and their Rural Action Project , and they 've promised us two thousand pounds as an actual funding , so as and when funding becomes available from councils or from private sector or from our own efforts , they match that pound for pound as we go along .
13 Theyll have to give us the trophy for keeps if we win it again in the next quarter century .
14 Do you agree that the characteristics of Skelton as we have considered them this morning , make a contribution to the setting of the historic city of York ?
15 erm arguing and er they was going on about this because if Mrs went to a farm and then said that she saw some hens there that did n't look particularly fit erm and said they 'd got to be culled and if the farmer thought otherwise then we got into all sorts of tangles because we knew nothing about poultry .
16 I draw his attention to the fact that we are now net exporters of televisions whereas we were net importers under the Labour party and to the fact that motor output has been expanding in recent years whereas it was declining under Labour .
17 I wondered if we were both thinking of Charlie as we did it .
18 There was a great deal of excitement while we were getting ready .
19 The crackling of a fire , the dawn chorus of the birds , the sound of waves upon the shore ; most of these go unnoticed and yet each of them can give a great deal of pleasure if we could only learn to become aware of them .
20 And we did require and demand and obtain from the Treasury a great deal of information before we would allow , as it were , any decision to be made .
21 But , unfortunately , we are also importing a great deal of paper so we produce more waste than we can cope with .
22 The photographer had long since gone , but Kevin Seymour and I pored over the yacht 's considerable folio of charts while we discussed in detail the cruises that have been sketched in so lightly in the previous paragraphs .
23 The following summer I was in command of Searcher when we paid a courtesy visit to Holland .
24 We also omitted the four women who were infertile as a result of endometriosis because we were specially interested in the influence of birth control methods on endometriosis .
25 Gordon mentions this pause before the onset of summer as we walk towards Crinkle Ghyll .
26 I remember the brief darkness at midnight when the arc lamps lit the decks ; the interminable hours of daylight ; the unceasing work with men too tired to talk ; the hurried meals ; the luxury of sleep when we were moving from one fishing ground to another .
27 ‘ They can do without the luxury of eating until we catch that monster , ’ he told Matron .
28 I could see he was troubled by the need to start a new piece of paper when we got back to the surgery .
29 Because it , it 's terrifying looking at a blank piece of paper when we needed ways to start the comment .
30 On the back of a piece of paper where we had worked on a poem called ‘ The Word ’ I found the quotation that begins this chapter .
  Next page