Example sentences of "[conj] we [adv] [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Also at : ‘ THE POTTERY ’ , High Street , St. David 's — where we also sell antique maps and prints .
2 In November we were at the annual bazaar at the English ( episcopal ) church , where we also made many contacts .
3 Software development , especially in areas such as taxonomic and other scientific computing , has been a major area of weakness , where we definitely lacked in-house expertise prior to the appointment of a Taxonomic Computing specialist .
4 Where we often have great difficulty with Community proposals is when co-operation is replaced not by agreement but by majority voting on issues of concern to us .
5 Although we only have 48 eyeshadows , any woman will find colours that are just right for her .
6 We were sharing a two-bedroomed council house with my Pop , and although we only paid thirty bob towards the rent , we had two kids and Malc was earning just £4.10.0 a week as a butcher .
7 All the same , the fact that we are consciously mathematical , that we consciously incorporate straight lines and rectangles and arcs of circles into our artifacts , that we measure things and reckon by numbers , does seem to be a very fundamental human characteristic which is of great importance for the way we organize our lives .
8 We know that we still have several hours of concentrated work ahead and another meal to look forward to at the end of the working day .
9 The fact that we never sold any records and loads of rotten indie music is our fault has nothing to do with it !
10 at the start , but as things went on , and just the fact that we never had any talks between the union and the management .
11 A constant problem with promoting all four gardens is that we never have enough leaflets to supply all the outlets that request them .
12 The most curious thing is that we actually esteem this sort of thinking and consider it clever instead of facile .
13 As we get older and perhaps more worldly , it is sometimes awkward to admit that we ever believed such nonsense , and even more difficult to admit that not everything we imbibed was bad or wrong .
14 So they 're , I do n't know whether it 's , i it 's terribly reactionary to say that we really want one teletext cos your holidays , might they be coming up on Ceefax
15 Yeah , but basically from , from that programme all , all the er , you can see all the resources were really being used all week and , but I had a problem when we came to do the bedrooms that er , you can there , we ran out of work for the decorators to do er removing this thing , once you 've removed and then I managed to squeeze in , but where the second decorator 's erm up to room twenty-three but rather than erm have just one gang than , and not , not using as many as the resources as we possibly could I let them gave the second gang a few rooms that they could actually squeeze in without interrupting I 've let them do up to room twenty-three and then and then basically the carpenting and they have to come in after everybody else has done what they Monday morning basically we just decided that we really needed more resources the earlier sequence of events to , to get so we were getting to so whether we 've been given
16 If there is to be any criticism of our play , it is in relation to our tactical awareness , to the fact that we sometimes made wrong choices which more experienced people would not have made ’ .
17 In the past we gave very detailed advice , and the legislation has now been changed to say that we merely identify any shortcomings or failings in the application .
18 Miniaturisation enabled small nuclear artillery shells to be produced and that , in its turn , made way for the development of the theory that we now call flexible response .
19 It seems that we now have serial correlation in our model as a result of including the dummy right , now we 've got to test statistic , I mean always look at the F version of the test , right , er our F statistic of three point seven six is significantly different from zero , right , that leaves seven percent level , so a five percent test we probably accept that we did n't have any serial correlations and we just got there by the skin of our teeth on that particular test erm yes , you could probably get away with this one , functional forms fine , no problem there , hetero skilasticity right , are F statistic three point nine but significantly different from zero that 's six percent level , right , so again we just scrape it if we were looking at the ninety five percent confidence it wants to be five percent if you are using as five percent significance level .
20 That 's a tribute to the British work force and do n't let the honourable gentleman forget that we now have one point four million more in work , in the U K than we had ten years ago .
21 Peskibe continues to thrive , operational profits there are now well over a million a week and I think it 's worth remembering that one subscriber may have three subscriptions say to two movie channels and one sports channels and if you count these individually , it means that we now have four point nine million subscriptions achieved during the second worst recession , recession this century .
22 As we have seen , higher education in the Principality has assumed a quite different form from that which existed in 1970 so that we now have ten institutions of higher education made up of the Polytechnic of Wales , three national colleges , and six colleges and institutes of higher education .
23 This last proviso actually tells us that we only need two symbols , T and S , to describe points .
24 ( 6.12 ) unc it turns out that we only need one law to deal with channel declarations : an elimination rule analogous to ( 6.3 ) .
25 Many of us , however , do not realise that we unwittingly induce Pavlovian-type responses in our own dogs by establishing a rigid routine for feeding .
26 He performed his tasks at WGIC apparently too well , so that we subsequently had great difficulty in getting him back !
27 ‘ The children like convenience foods such as sausages or fishfingers and chips so we sometimes have that sort of thing , and occasionally we buy a takeaway from the chip shop .
28 I was paid for the lessons not in money but in food , so we always had enough oil , sugar , cheese and butter — commodities that were now difficult to obtain .
29 I been married for 11 months and my husband works away during the week so we only see each other at weekends .
30 If further research shows that some of these patients are clinically gluten sensitive ( and we already have some evidence to support this ) , then by implication , the previous definition of coeliac disease ( a flat mucosa ) may have excluded up to half of symptomatic patients , referred for jejunal biopsy , who would benefit clinically from a gluten free diet .
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