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

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1 Now sheep are animals that we tend to regard as being pretty stupid and most of the time they 're timid creatures who will run away at the slightest sound or sight of something strange in their midst .
2 Well looking at the individual breeds of animals that we 've got here , tell us about the basic breed line that you you keep on the farm here .
3 It 's only thanks to the efforts of walkers that we 've got so far . ’
4 Sometimes the losses that we experience come so quickly one after the other that they become almost indistinguishable .
5 Our signals that we want to speak , or that we have n't yet finished speaking , are often sent visually and the signals are not the same in all cultures .
6 This is a very useful facility because many of the so called different styles that we want to knit are often based on one of the classic shapes .
7 It 's a shot in the arm for our supporters that we have signed a player associated with skill and flair . ’
8 And we need to use the reserves that we do have in the balance sheet , we need to spend them wisely in order to achieve our objectives , our objectives for change , and we must recognise that they can only be spent once .
9 Erm but some of these childrens ' addresses that we 've had at St Paul 's they are very interesting and you get something out of them .
10 Here are twelve talk tactics that we use to gain control :
11 Can I thank you for those generous comments that you say towards er , , I think they 're totally true , he 's worked extremely hard in making sure this council has a budget which balanced , and it 's due to his expertise and bullying tactics that we 've succeeded , and he should be fully congratulated for that , and I think it 's the determination of those who were elected in May as well , to make sure that we protected services and jobs , and , and make sure that we actually carried out the mandate which the electors elected us to do that we have such ach achieved what we have achieved today .
12 The fundamental original units that we need to postulate , in order to understand the coming into existence of everything , either consist of literally nothing ( according to some physicists ) , or ( according to other physicists ) they are units of the utmost simplicity , far too simple to need anything so grand as deliberate Creation .
13 Now , those of you who have not been able to watch a television set may not be aware of the really remarkable performances that we have seen here at Royal St. George 's on this beautiful English summer 's day .
14 Only when you can see words that we 've got now that adapted from words then .
15 And our Lord in the words that we 've read gives a very solemn answer to that question in the , in those words that we read a few moments ago and his immediate answer to the question you know are there few that be saved , was to say many , this was in the following verse , many shall not be able to be saved , now does that mean that only a few will be saved , that there 's only a few people who are gon na be in heaven that Jesus Christ came and died on the cross for about a handful of people , a small percentage does that what it , is that what it means , well lets look and see what the bible has to say , in Matthew chapter seven in verse thirteen and verse fourteen , this is what Jesus says enter by the narrow gate for the gate is wide and the way is broad that leads to destruction and many of those who enter by it , for the gate is small and the way is narrow that leads to life , but few of those who find it any way in the same book , in , in Matthew in , in , in chapter twenty two and in , in , in verse fourteen , listen again to what it says there Jesus is speaking he says for many a called , but few are chosen
16 I am trying , within the context of the debate , to identify how we can move forward from the 1990s to the 21st century , the problems that we as a nation will have to face , our relationship with Europe and how we can learn from the nations that we have said are the best , such as Germany , and develop a sound strategic regional policy .
17 In this case , however , the term " deconstruction " points to de Man 's unfaithful translation of Nietzsche 's argument into terms that serve his own argument : it therefore operates the same ambiguous structure of voices that we have observed in the discussions of Rousseau and Proust .
18 It has to be done evenly across the board , in the rural and urban areas , or else we will fight every tooth and nail to make sure that we , our schools that we represent do not suffer .
19 But what I , we are not prepared to do , is allow the schools that we represent to suffer , just to maintain small schools in this county , which are no longer economical or viable or educationally beneficial to the children that attend them .
20 It reflects the fact that we have considerably improved the salary prospects and career prospects of teachers as a result of all the steps that we have taken in recent years .
21 Now , as the chairman said we base the salaries of directors on two elements an element of base salary which looks at market levels and we ergo , have a fair base which reflects a sort of medium to upper level of companies of this size we then leverage , very carefully , a bonus scheme related to performance and I believe that is the right thing to do and I believe and so do my fellow directors who sit on that committee believe that it is one of the reasons that we 've seen the great growth in this company over the last five years which you 've achieved and which actually the Chancellor of the Exchequer would very glad about because it is increasing the wealth and the benefit of this country , particularly as a lot of those earnings are coming from overseas and will in , in time be repatriated in Britain .
22 The physical events that activate our sense organs are already imperfect versions of the properties of objects that we wish to know about .
23 have prospect accounts that we need to deal with ?
24 Er we set up on a regional basis er er Robert talked to you a couple of months ago about the initiatives that he 's taking from our and that again is a very much of a cross practice initiative er which is drawing on all the skills that we 've got within the with within the office penetrate the middle market sector and we are going to er specifically use er our grounds expertise and er computer audit expertise as a product which we saw would be attractive to these er these sort of companies .
25 What are the areas that we need to think about , the skills that we need to develop ?
26 Though Jim Lumb , his agent , describes him as ‘ a bit of an orator ’ it is not chiefly for Hague 's speaking skills that we have left the video running at home .
27 I am still opposed to it and er I just think that it 's not the right way to reconcile contradicting policies that we 've had .
28 ‘ We will introduce the policies that we have undertaken to introduce , and in the course of doing that I hope we can attract a breadth of support to add to our majority and to add to the degree of consensus supporting that majority , ’ he added .
29 That the long-term unemployment figures are much lower than they were bears testimony to the fact that many of our pledges and the policies that we have implemented are having a positive effect on the ground in relation to the individuals about whom Opposition Members spoke with such understandable feeling and passion .
30 However , it is not the world 's statesmen that we have to thank for even this limited achievement in arms control , but the women and men whose political activity has ensured that some action must be taken .
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