Example sentences of "we [adv] [vb base] [prep] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Having grown up surrounded ( almost bombarded ) by spoken language , we rarely think about it .
2 Mr Eliot has lived abroad so long that we rarely think of him as an American and he is never written about from the point of view of his relation to other American authors .
3 We take a frozen river for a long way , a bumpy ride that keeps you concentrating , and when we eventually come off it , there is a lone tree that the dogs pull towards despite our efforts .
4 When we eventually get to it the Visitor Centre there explains with diagrams and scientific data why this is the driest place in Australia .
5 The constructivist thesis , it is argued , is not relevant because mental representations have not been defined away and replaced by talk of actions : we still have to say how mental life as we know it to be , with the representational character that we naturally give to it , relates to neuronal life .
6 Cos we only stand in him .
7 That 's an interesting problem , the way we communicate erm a computer is not the way we necessarily think of it .
8 That 's an interesting problem , the way we communicate to a computer is not the way we necessarily think of it .
9 We basically say to them if you put your trust in us we will not fail you — and that has been the case .
10 We just joke with them .
11 And recently in April , when two young girls from one of the refugee camps in San Salvador were captured , we put their names across on the programme every day until they were eventually transferred from a secret prison to the Women 's prison , We regard it as a triumph to have got them into a public prison , although they are minors , and now we are demanding their release , of course we exhaust all the legal channels as well but these days we just think of it as a formality , There have been occasions when we have presented a Habeas Corpus petition to the Supreme Court of Justice and the official concerned has simply torn the paper up in front of us and told us to get out .
12 I agree what Rita asked for which was that it should all be archived in a central divisional higher , and I am taking it that they I think that the way we generally go about it that when we do n't get an enquiry erm , or when we do n't get a commission we keep a copy of it with the documents for a reasonable period of time .
13 The transition back to ‘ self ’ , as we normally think of it , may not be immediate .
14 Ron and I take each year as it comes and we always plan for me to run a personal best every season .
15 Well I like my mum and dad here ( adoptive parents ) 'cause I 've been with them for some years , but there again , I like my own father as well ... we still think of him and would like to go and visit him .
16 We ordinarily think of values and obligations being really there , but we also think of them as intrinsically prescriptive. that is , such that one who knows them must be affected conatively in an appropriate way .
17 WE ALSO CARE FOR YOURS
18 We 'll look at what you 're currently doing and we also suggest to you something that you could be doing .
19 But we also attribute to him the power to mediate between those same concerns and the hostile forces of disease .
20 And we nearly come under it er were only for the Yanks .
21 When we look at the colour pattern of a cat we automatically think of it as something the animal inherits from its parents .
22 The hurt , the fear , the affront , the sheer injustice of it all ; if we do not run away altogether , we inwardly shrink from it .
23 Er the county council acknowledges that inward investment is important but because of the nature of the local economy and competition elsewhere , I think we realistically look at it in terms of er it going to provide a small contribution to the local economy .
24 In the New Testament , God 's love is poured ‘ into our hearts ’ through the Holy Spirit , while it is ‘ on the heart ’ that Christ writes our new identity , as we now belong to him .
25 And it 's erm it 's so oppressive and we really worry about it with the children .
26 The only time we really react to them is when , perhaps , it 's on our car we do n't them to disturb anybody and you 're trying to fumble about with your keys and switch the thing off .
27 While the BBC series Lifesense continues to present a view of what animals think of us , we present 30 questions , devised by nature writer Robin Robbins , to help reveal what we really think of them .
28 Thus , when we think of a person , the impression we give to him and the one we wanted to give to him and what we really think of him , and what we say to other people about him are all exactly the same .
29 When little Nell enters the labourer 's hut , we supposedly look around it with the eyes of the child .
30 Is that what we really want , before we irreversibly lurch into it ?
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