Example sentences of "as we [vb base] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This was one of the biggest issues facing the club , and our success will mean a great deal as we strive to strengthen our overall standards .
2 Your reactions are important as we hope to expand our range of environmentally-friendly goods in future offers .
3 My hon. Friend is entirely right about the pride of the Russian people , which must be respected as we seek to help them .
4 Exhausted by the glare of fame that has been his lot since NME elevated him to cult status TDFC ( as we like to call him , being mates and all that ) has been trying to relax by helping his bandmate CARL build a replica of London out of matchsticks in his Manchester bedroom .
5 We push his legs but they buckle at the knees , so we have to hold them up above our heads as we push to make them stay straight , then as we shove and his trousers are rolled down by the rim of stone , his arms flop over the far side of the shaft rim and it suddenly gets easier to push him .
6 Carrying on from this morning 's thoughts about the occasional slip whilst following the programme , we should also realise that this will happen as we attempt to achieve our other goals in life .
7 We run into immense difficulties as soon as we attempt to project our minds any distance at all above or beyond the area of our concrete experience , for then our reasoning and arguing can not be properly controlled .
8 I thought that see as we 've given them five hundred before , perhaps you 'd consider giving them , perhaps two hundred and fifty this time .
9 Now erm this is this is archetypical group behaviour , but whatever it is , it can not necessarily reflect erm that individual 's own erm peculiar self as it were using peculiar in the in the strict sense and proper to them , because as we 've seen what happens in a group is , is , is the individual .
10 As we 've seen he 's now in prison .
11 You might get a bit crumpled from here on in as we 've seen our last hotel for a bit .
12 sure , there may be some thinking that , there may also though be er if you move through to the forties you 're , y you 're twenty years on from the nineteen twenties , you , you 've had and you 've had deterioration in agricultural conditions er as , as we 've seen you 've got erm increasing landlord absenteeism , you , you 've got a downward , an upward pressure on rent in terms of how much was having to be paid in real terms , all of those things might have come together to , to , to push the peasant over and to push him outside .
13 Well there 's , there 's still , as we 've seen there 's still a , a very big group of poor .
14 We 're moving to Shanghai with mixed feelings , as we 've heard we 'll be staying in the Peace Hotel , in the noisy centre of the city , but it 's nice to feel now that we are moving on to the home stretch .
15 We 're going to retire here as soon as we 've sold our house . ’
16 I mean as long as we 've got something which is in the of where we want to be , we can actually measure how well we 're performing against our own plan , which I think is what you 'd like to be able to do .
17 In much the same way as we 've got we 've just got ta go away and do some questioning ourselves erm get amongst it an say okay can we do some of these things more effectively ?
18 Now as we 've got nought one with a bit more room to fit in it it works a lot better .
19 But best is last , as we 've got you bang to rights handling stolen property . ’
20 as long as we 've got your phone number .
21 as long as we 've got your phone number .
22 It is my view that when you look at all the locational criteria contained in policy H two and as we 've discussed them , you 'll reach the conclusion that there is one corridor that best meets those criterion , is the A sixty four northeast of York , sector six .
23 Anyway , yeah , and so , right I go to Bunnie and I , can you take me home yes , cos I 'm supposed to be going to a pizza to have pizza round my friend 's house , he goes , mm , they 're going , oh we 're starving , you have to go round to somebody 's house , I said he goes well I 'll take you stra , I 'll take you as soon as we 've had something to eat .
24 That Madam , Gary used to say , she 's been forty for as long as we 've known her .
25 On the other hand we do quite frequently mutter to ourselves as we try to deduce something logically — or even if we do n't make a sound we often use words in our head when trying to work out a complex problem .
26 As we try to decide what to eat , we notice that Denice has managed to do a certain amount of major structural damage to her menu , resulting to the pages ' coming out of the middle .
27 But now we have n't the stop to prevent our timber sliding as we try to gauge it .
28 He saw the Challenge materials as particularly useful for the individual resource-based projects which first-year children were encouraged to develop over several weeks in the summer term : Up to half term they really are very much guided as to the work they do , but as we get to know them better , and as teachers become more confident about letting them maybe work on longer pieces … and go out and get resources themselves , they can go towards more pupil-centred learning .
29 Choice of filtration method for a large cichlid tank is a matter of personal preference and can be as cheap or as expensive as we wish to make it .
30 This is what the Englishness of England is made of , and it is this sense of place and the particular which we are currently in danger of losing , just as we come to understand it more clearly .
  Next page