Example sentences of "our [noun sg] [coord] [be] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 The text has of course been approved by our Chairman and is enclosed for your information .
2 Slavery was not exactly an enviable affair , its memory haunts much of our literature and is aggravated by the recent Colonial past of many nations .
3 It is not just that beetles and mice are pests ( we might have said the same of ladybirds and the pursuit of wildfowl ) , but rather that the relative similarity of the larger mammals to ourselves materially affects our thinking and is reflected in our instinctive responses .
4 Any comments ( which are there for our benefit and are ignored by Windows ) are preceded by a semicolon as follows :
5 In 1061 , a Saxon lady Richeldas de Faverche of Walsingham had a vision of Our Lady and was asked to build a model of the holy house in her grounds .
6 It simply does n't answer our need and is flying in the face of common sense . ’
7 When the last trump sounds and I stand before the Lord our God and am judged I will be found wanting and know not what to do .
8 By midday we realised we had finished our water and were sweating profusely .
9 of the bill for the most vulnerable people in our society and are causing millions of pensioners and poor people to face a cold and miserable Christmas ?
10 Some of the norms are societal , that is , they arise from the culture of our society and are carried into organizations .
11 He thinks it is itself something beautiful that sort of swims down into our world and is incarnated in particular objects , and then he wonders about that because his own way of forming universals means that he 'd have to do it all again and again and again in an infinite regress , so he has a problem , basically , about calling beauty itself beautiful .
12 He thinks it is itself something beautiful that sort of swims down into our world and is incarnated in particular objects .
13 A detailed explanation of this correction is given in our book and was approved recently by Age and Ageing : ‘ If you do not feel confident that you understand the Gompertz-Makeham equation , nor the distinction between age-specific mortality and the force-of-mortality , then this book is a must for you . ’
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