Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] we [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Later decades have seen other organizations use the term so that we speak in the twentieth century about the trade union ‘ movement ’ or the ‘ peace movement ’ ; we seldom think to describe the Conservative Party , the Confederation of British Industry or the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as ‘ movements ’ .
2 Well quite a lot , we we went out with them for a meal last night erm we had an interpreter who who was the only one that could speak English but it was it was well worth the evening , it did a lot for relationships and I think that there should be more of this in football , that off the field people should get to know each other a lot better and we felt at the end of the evening that it had been well worthwhile .
3 So if we get to the all play and we win the all play we 've won .
4 So if we look at the living room I would say this is our , our living room , right into the hall erm the T V in the corner there settee there so you wander in there , Gill where would you put yourself , where would you sit down ?
5 So if we look at the positive effects of Europe .
6 ‘ Suddenly we realised it was eight o'clock and we rushed to the sitting room to put on the TV .
7 To tell you what to do but it 's also knowing how to do it , because sometimes especially if we knew in the truth , we do n't always know what to do and if we 're very young you see , we 're , it 's , it 's one
8 Sweetheart , I told Mother I was falling in love with you long before we went to the island .
9 Privacy was not a word in our vocabulary , and postcards and diaries were mercilessly read aloud as we trekked through the jungle of North Borneo .
10 But we can not explain why this is always objectionable , so long as we remain on the plane of justice as I have defined it .
11 However , so long as we remain in the Community , Parliament has effectively handed over a number of functions that it has traditionally fulfilled .
12 So long as we looked upon the production of value and the value of the product of capital individually , the bodily form of the commodities produced was wholly immaterial for the analysis , whether it was machines , for instance , corn , or looking glasses .
13 There may be problems and differences between the two sides of the House over the way in which we plan Britain , especially as we move into the next century .
14 I mean basically when we look at the range of council services , then you have to take decisions about the balance of spending between different priorities .
15 The distinction is arbitrary and it varies very greatly as we move across the map .
16 This will build up obviously as we go through the course .
17 One other possible objection is that the difference which we are describing may be real but should not be regarded as part of syntax , rather as a variation that comes into play only when we focus on the correlation between linguistic expressions and external non-linguistic phenomena .
18 Only when we get to the seventh paragraph of the story do we hear Benn 's statement to the court , which claims that the PC said : ‘ You black bastard , this will teach you to mess about with the police . ’
19 Birds , fish and invertebrates provide some fascinating instances of the use of tools , but it is only when we come to the mammals , and particularly the primates , that tool using begins to approach anything like its full potential .
20 We all found him interesting , so when we lay in the sun after lunch , the white gravel covering our backs with powdery marks , his fighting demonstrations were keenly attended .
21 And so when we came to the negotiation process so to say , it was a stalemate .
22 So when we walked from the pool to the car I felt the whole impact of the sun .
23 So when we come up the lane it was on the top here and er Sally 's dad was with it and then er the engine was still going so this girl , well erm one of them wenches
24 So when we get on the phone we always talk about full page .
25 So when we look at the grimacing gestures of a chimpanzee and wonder at the almost ludicrous parallels with our own behaviour this is just part of a whole host of behavioural and anatomical similarities that show without doubt that we ought to be classified with the apes ( we are all of us primates ) , and that we share a distant ancestor with our diminutive caricatures .
26 Er she 'd sat up er obviously when we moved into the bedroom and from there I 'm not exactly sure what she was doing , in as much as she was n't a threat so therefore perhaps I I did n't pay that much attention to what she was doing .
27 That we look not for detailed application of single techniques in a piecemeal fashion , but rather that we look for the general developments from which we can build school specific approaches which translate the experience into usable school practice .
28 After the visit Avice said that " finding a solution will take longer than we thought at the end of last year " .
29 ‘ I think it might even be further away than we came on the Long Drive , ’ said Masklin quietly .
30 I Admittedly if we stay in the rural districts of England in 1700 we will discover that forty to fifty years is not unrealistic , but old age is rare .
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