Example sentences of "[noun] we [vb mod] [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 As an association we would prefer that no new stadium should be erected but that Hearts should remain at Tynecastle .
2 As an association we would prefer that no new stadium should be erected but that Hearts should remain at Tynecastle .
3 On the gain side we might find that a choice which seems very attractive does actually miss out on an important priority .
4 The most recent has been from the late 1970s through the 1980s , and if we think of those years as one of only four periods of major structural change in nearly two centuries we can appreciate that we have been living in interesting times .
5 By the same reasoning we must conclude that K could plausibly have arisen , directly by a single change , from something slightly different again , which we may call K " .
6 In imagining what it would be like to be fundholders in future we should assume that overall adequacy of funding for health care will be less than we have previously known .
7 With this in mind we can see that the indulgent familiarity of the maternal uncle towards his nephew matches the mother 's generous affection towards her child .
8 Now on the subject of Aston Villa we can confirm that despite today 's report to the contrary , the two million pound transfer of Tony Daley to is on .
9 Pursuing , perhaps riskily , a computer analogy we can argue that while the body resembles the hardware of a computer the mind comprises the software , the programmes that analyse and organize information to produce responses to inputs .
10 From the investigation of distracting unattended words we can conclude that words are recognised before they are fixated , and that meanings might be useful in guiding our eyes efficiently across the text .
11 For instance , we could add the words we must accept that in front of ( 14 ) , or the phrase by AD 1550 after ( 15 ) .
12 Since charged particles rarely travel close to the velocity of light we may conclude that the magnetic forces are by orders of magnitude smaller than the electric forces .
13 While small influences in the short term may add up to large influences in the longer term we must conclude that , within an election campaign , television could influence but not dictate the public agenda .
14 Following Hill we shall show that all estimates must lie within these bounds .
15 In essence we can say that the sentenced prison population is a function of the number of people received into prison and the average length of sentence that they actually serve ( sometimes known as effective sentence length : Fitzmaurice and Pease , 1992 : 575 ) .
16 In his early work we can see that Foucault 's position involves a remarkable development of Althusser 's hints that art can function as a privileged category that provides an ‘ internal distance ’ from ideology by relating histories , writing reports .
17 When Labour promise more for the NHS we should remember that more is now being spent on the NHS than ever before .
18 From the above passage we can see that an examination of the production , circulation and consumption of the total social product presents different problems from those posed by the movement of a single capital .
19 You can erm by word of mouth recommendations it means that we , we have to spend less money on advertising , now that means that in the long run we can pass that on to the client like yourself
20 For purposes of exposition we shall assume that the surplus-value is divided equally between accumulation and unproductive consumption .
21 In order to simplify exposition we shall assume that the level of money wages is given at W so that we are able to fix the position of the aggregate marginal cost curve in Figure 5.5(b) .
22 Hilda reminded teachers that in order to continue to receive grant aid from the Sports Council we must show that we are a growing and flourishing Society .
23 Hilda reminded teachers that in order to continue to receive grant aid from the Sports Council we must show that we are a growing and flourishing Society .
24 In both circumstances we can see that the caveman 's body must be prepared , following the initial fright or increase in anxiety , for fight and/or flight .
25 In addition to the above motives we must recognize that the TOM provides a very convenient place for pure speculation .
26 After correcting the posture we will find that movements become easier and we will sense a lightness that has not been present since childhood .
27 In the past three decades we might say that , in Scott Fitzgerald 's words , ‘ life was being refined down to a point ’ , in this case the point of increasing material consumption ; or , to put the matter in more political terms , that the industrialized societies , both capitalist and socialist , were developing the kind of narrow and obsessive orientation which Tawney ( 1921 , pp. 106–7 ) criticized when he wrote that :
28 Before considering these offences we must note that the Act is aimed at trade and business .
29 If we support care in the community we must realise that nurse prescribing is part of that and will help to make it work .
30 For BSL and its community we can see that both of these opportunities may be less available to hearing learners .
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