Example sentences of "[noun] of [noun] as we " in BNC.

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1 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 ?
2 I wondered if we were both thinking of Charlie as we did it .
3 Gordon mentions this pause before the onset of summer as we walk towards Crinkle Ghyll .
4 Those words of execution as we continue to read them .
5 We are on a shore of white sand too hot to stand still for a moment , great breakers surf and trip to swathes of foam as we dart into the solid black and lovely shade .
6 Transparency and communication must be emphasised to re-establish the perceived independence and honesty of scientists as we move into newer and more complicated areas of technology .
7 The modern veterinary surgeon does not see nearly as many cases of distemper as we used to , simply because most people immunize their puppies at the earliest possible moment .
8 As a result with good control of working capital , our cash flow overall was virtually the same as in the previous year in spite of the significant profit collapse and although there may be some further redundancies this year , I do n't expect them to be in any way on the same scale as during nineteen ninety two and the important thing is that we now have costs in line with the lower level of revenue as we look into nineteen ninety three .
9 The only thing we 'll take from there is a bit of dust as we walk
10 The October sun dipped into the Atlantic , silhouetting the Paps of Jura as we shoved off into the sound toward Harry 's Island .
11 But a bat uses its sound information for very much the same kind of purpose as we use our visual information .
12 ‘ It means it now rests with the international side to put on the same , if not a better kind of performance as we put on against Norway last month .
13 ‘ It means it now rests with the international side to put on the same , if not a better kind of performance as we put on against Norway last month .
14 In fact , if anything , we 're going to be doing less and less of that kind of music as we go along .
15 It is the same kind of calculation as we did for haemoglobin , and it produces a similarly large result .
16 It should be appreciated , however , that exactly the same kind of analysis as we shall develop here could be made equally revealingly of practical , everyday communism , Christianity , the apartheid philosophy of white South Africa , l the delusions of the mentally ill , or , as Ernest Gellner so tellingly shows , contemporary linguistic philosophy.2 So while our quest to understand the mysteries of witchcraft may take us deep into the inaccessible jungles of distant continents , we shall regularly encounter disconcertingly familiar images showing how dose to home we really are .
17 Erm even tapestries like the Devonshire hunting tapestry which you may have seen at the V and A. Er the tops look as if they 're been eaten by mice because they 're been so often snagged onto tenterhooks and moved and moved round and onto other tenterhooks , they just do n't seem to have had the same view of this kind of thing as we do .
18 There was no more talking from the Germans , and no more mortaring , the remaining part of the night passed fairly quickly with no further signs of tiredness as we lay and listened .
19 All this contrasts sharply with the flimsy world of divination , of Madame Sosostris , which lands us unsurprisingly in the heart of London as we hear how all this ‘ fiddle ’ will always be found ‘ When there is distress of nations and perplexity/ Whether on the shores of Asia , or in the Edgware Road ’ .
20 The heart of Europe as we mean it , is not John Major 's heart of Europe .
21 So it should come as no surprise that we can teach children to manipulate this theatrical language by the same variety of means as we can teach other aspects of drama ; using the whole gamut of strategies ( working in role or out of role , with small or large groups , using forum theatre , still images , games and exercises ) .
22 Okay there might be in all sorts of ways , in terms of equality , in terms of socialism , it 's , it 's all a bit dubious erm but the other reason for taxing down is that , let's face it , the majority of peasants as we , as we saw last week are still poor and if the Communist Party is wanting to maximize its revenue , if it was gon na say okay we 're not gon na tax anybody at under six or eight hundred erm you , you 're gon na take out er half the population and you would have to get that income by taxing the rich even harder and that would be a disincentive .
23 When we reached Dunkil we could have done two things , we could have said to the Bible class , We had a marvellous journey up and told them all about the glory of God as we saw him in the mountains , or we could have said , We almost had an accident on our way up here .
24 I remember the burn of shame as we stacked the silent , abandoned plates .
25 What happens to the aspirations of youth as we grow older , do they just melt away ?
26 This chart indicates the ownership of equipment as we went to press in January 1991 , but the pattern is developing every few months as companies change hands .
27 These beautiful and delicate flowers , often heavily scented , include the complete range of colour as we know it , hence the name , which is the Greek word for rainbow , and from which the word " orris " is directly derived .
28 What the right hon. and learned Gentleman said then has , over time , come to be seen yet more acutely as a cogent and sensible analysis of the needs of Scotland as we approach the end of the century .
29 That 's the same sort of flow as we had a Birkdale Cop .
30 We would want this to be seen logically , through approval of the structure plan , to be taken up in r in the relevant local plan , and for that relevant local plan to then sort out competing claims from prospective developments , in mu in much the same sort of exercise as we 've seen in the structure plan but obviously in a more detailed way .
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