Example sentences of "[noun pl] that we " in BNC.

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1 We should n't adopt stands that we try this now and try something else next time round , which I believe is what the C E C is recommending .
2 Then all of a sudden these strange people started coming out of record companies who were involved in the video end of it and deciding this is what we should do with that song and sort of you know these were songs that we had planned and recorded and and all of a sudden these people were changing them .
3 But it is not only to the institutionalised abuse of animals that we must turn if we are progressively to disengage ourselves .
4 The greater understanding of the minds of our common farm animals that we gain from these experiments will undoubtedly be of use in designing housing systems which allow the animals both increased freedom , and increased control over their own lives .
5 There are also several creatures which , while they seem to be related to the segmented worms , are rather more complex in structure and quite unlike any other animals that we know , living or fossil .
6 Well looking at the individual breeds of animals that we 've got here , tell us about the basic breed line that you you keep on the farm here .
7 Now sheep are animals that we tend to regard as being pretty stupid and most of the time they 're timid creatures who will run away at the slightest sound or sight of something strange in their midst .
8 We are such thoroughly visual animals that we hardly realize what a complicated business seeing is .
9 Wild rabbits can be kept in captivity and eventually tamed , and it is , in fact , because this has happened through the centuries that we now see so many variations .
10 When we stopped and slowly turned , with our bulging eyes in place , the gang scattered with such blood-curdling screams that we wondered if we had n't overdone it , and felt sufficiently ashamed of ourselves never to use the eyes again .
11 But the important point to remember is that we do not observe these sociolinguistic patterns directly : it is the speech of individuals in conversational settings that we observe and describe , and it is by analysing a large quantity of spoken language from many speakers that we can then demonstrate the patterns that emerge from our data .
12 It 's only thanks to the efforts of walkers that we 've got so far . ’
13 And the two microscopic methods that we discussed were patch clamp and planarlipid bilayers .
14 The the lists that we get range from mediocre to pretty good to excellent .
15 ‘ We are totally convinced as a committee that the losses that we are facing — losses on an unprecedented scale — are a result of reckless and negligent underwriting , ’ said Mr Nutting .
16 Sometimes the losses that we experience come so quickly one after the other that they become almost indistinguishable .
17 We think that it conserves services , that it has searched out the vast majority of efficiencies that we can find within this council and that it does n't pass on to the poll tax , council tax payers the fruits , I mean it does pass on the poll tax or council tax payers the fruits of how we have achieved savings and efficiencies over the last couple of years .
18 Our signals that we want to speak , or that we have n't yet finished speaking , are often sent visually and the signals are not the same in all cultures .
19 erm it 's it reminds me of the kind of embarrassments that we experience on a number of levels actually .
20 ‘ The first thing I did when I came out was try to explain to the kids that we were n't bad people .
21 ‘ It 's funny , ’ says Brian , ‘ they 're both so like my own kids that we often say the stork must have dropped them in the wrong homes the first time around .
22 And I mean the kids the kids that we yo yo some kids er , I mean they were just beautiful and other kids lost them within a couple of days !
23 ‘ The aim is to show the kids that we are in the new Europe , that the Dutch children are n't far away and that we are all one . ’
24 Y oh yes it gave us advantage to the extent that we 'd someone b behind us to fight for any , any er grievances that we had .
25 just trying to sort out this business of this the offices that we 're being let in the Strand Theatre that er people are moving in this week and they 've got no authority to move you see .
26 We 've picked some of the best utilities that we believe could still find a place on your hard disk , even once you 've got MS-DOS installed there .
27 ‘ Mr Ruane will have told you , no doubt , you adhere , most strictly , to the guidelines that we lay down .
28 The guidelines that we rely on here are parallel to those of ‘ exploratory ’ science , as described by Tukey ( 1977 ) , Diaconis ( 1985 ) and others , and also to those of ethnographers who investigate the internal structures of non-mainstream societies .
29 If , as I have argued in the previous section , moral or ethical theories do not provide formulae that replace the need for intuitions , but , on the contrary , are used in the service of new ones , it is these intuitions that we must focus on .
30 And it 's self employment so the couriers that we er supplied with the parcels with are the p- umm er , they 're liable for tax and insurance if any is due , I mean earn a certain amount of money before you start
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