Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] we look at [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 So if we look at a a typical family .
2 So if we look at the living room I would say this is our , our living room , right into the hall erm the T V in the corner there settee there so you wander in there , Gill where would you put yourself , where would you sit down ?
3 So if we look at the positive effects of Europe .
4 I mean basically when we look at the range of council services , then you have to take decisions about the balance of spending between different priorities .
5 So when we look at the grimacing gestures of a chimpanzee and wonder at the almost ludicrous parallels with our own behaviour this is just part of a whole host of behavioural and anatomical similarities that show without doubt that we ought to be classified with the apes ( we are all of us primates ) , and that we share a distant ancestor with our diminutive caricatures .
6 " The role of quantitative evidence can be understood more clearly if we look at the interrelation of the three concepts of DEVIANCE , PROMINENCE , and LITERARY RELEVANCE .
7 Now if we look at the first of these in terms of structure we can see that it can be defined as a dramatic exercise , fulfilling the principal requisite of exercise as outlined in Chapter Three — a commitment to a short-term task .
8 Er , now if we look at the er , staff reduction by sector .
9 Alright , now if we look at the , the rural instead of the urban wage rate , right , up here alright , now let's just say that it takes that amount of time before this individual gets a job in the urban area , alright , now if we discount alright the erm , the rural , the urban wages right , that 's all this
10 And when you look far into space , you 're also looking back in time and we 're looking back when we look at the very most distant objects .
11 It is brought home sharply when we look at the two lists of the inhabitants of the Nottinghamshire village of Clayworth that were made by the minister in 1676 and 1688 , for we find that no less than 61.8 per cent of those recorded in 1676 were not there twelve years later ; only one-third of those who had disappeared had died .
12 The peril of getting caught in an information loop is made plain if we look at the following facts .
13 Yet if we look at the procedures for embedding , it is not easy to see why one should count and the other not .
14 But a lot of these things come quite naturally er I hope we 'll see on when we look at the video that really I do n't think anybody had a major problem with the voice er and the words as well when you 're talking about two million pounds so in terms of the voice I do n't believe anybody has any major problems .
  Next page