Example sentences of "here we [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 Here we submit to a deep sea-change of hormonal rhythms and intestinal flora — and prepare ourselves for unknown months of deep immersion amongst the wilder regions of the archipelago .
2 From here we returned to Borrowdale via Jopplety Haw , grateful that the heatwave had transformed the moss into springy turf .
3 And here we come to the crunch — the core of the paradox .
4 However — and here we come to the point that Bukharin was attempting to make — a growth in production by Dept .
5 Here we come to more difficult ground .
6 Here we come to the first of many possible variations , in that this change of gain may be continuously variable or switched between two different values .
7 Here we come to a delicate area .
8 After an hour here we contined to Finchingfield which is one of the most beautiful little villages in Essex .
9 Interviewer : Can people say round here We go to the movies anymore ?
10 Here we came to a cave cut into the cliff as a gunport to deter pirate raiders .
11 Here we went to the British Airways Executive Aircraft desk and were taken out to the Moët et Chandon Executive Jet , which was waiting to fly us to Edinburgh .
12 Here we refer to the DNA binding activity in whole cell extracts which recognizes the E2F site as DRTF1/E2F .
13 The buyer will wish to know which services he or she has the benefit of , and here we refer to gas and mains water .
14 Here we return to property again , since what Marx seems to be stressing above all , in his discussion of other systems , is that , without the particular formulation of private property which dominates capitalist institutions , an ordered life is still possible .
15 From here we return to Funchal , a total distance of 63km having been covered .
16 Here we return to the theoretical problem of how the other can be articulated as such .
17 And if the Newquay lot turn up round here we have to really run 'em down . ’
18 They might , in some cases , indicate a facility of explicitness , but even here we have to be careful since what is or is not explicit is always relative .
19 There is something here we have to be very wary of .
20 Here we revert to the dialectic of the same and the other : as Derrida puts it , ‘ that the same … is never the identical , means first that Being is history ’ .
21 Here we seem to be implicitly relying on a further assumption , namely an assumption of topical coherence : if a second utterance can be interpreted as following on a first utterance , in the sense that they can be " heard " as being concerned with the same topic , then such an interpretation of the second utterance is warranted unless there are overt indications to the contrary ( again , see Chapters 3 and 6 ) .
22 Here we talk to former teachers , old friends and relatives in a special TODAY investigation to discover what lies inside the tortured soul of Sinead .
23 From here we descend to the crypt and find ourselves surrounded by the 11C remains of the Romanesque basilica .
24 Here we add to the complex as we have clearly shown that basal gastrin concentrations are neither affected by age nor by sex , but are influenced by H pylori .
25 From here we continue to Ponta do Sol ( 40km ) through a series of tunnels cut into the rock which are lit from the seaward side by sunlit ‘ windows ’ .
26 From here we continue to Terreira da Luta , where we get a good view of Funchal and see how high we have already climbed .
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