Example sentences of "[noun sg] we [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 BRANCHING OUT : Ivan Bennett of Southport with some of his treasured trees : ‘ Bonsai has become my religion we live off each other ’ Picture : STEPHEN SHAKESHAFT
2 We 've sold all the stock we had of pink rock ,
3 But we had to choose , early on , which side we belonged to , and children have to come down on the side that brings the food home and gets it on the table .
4 On one side we looked into a vast ravine .
5 On the production side we have in effect collapsed the two sectors into one .
6 ‘ But on the Continent we meddle with mere currency ; we argue of currency unions and common coinage .
7 And tell tell mummy we went on the swings .
8 I remember during some very intensive rehearsals we were doing for the Ring we came to a passage where the figuration of the accompaniment always comes out too strongly .
9 ‘ SCOTVEC is very grateful for the feedback we get from teachers and lecturers by way of the Module Comment Form .
10 Lastly , one other strange bit of feedback we had after attending was that our presence was seen to indicate our ‘ seriousness ’ as a production company — some sort of trial by ordeal .
11 ‘ The standard of football we produced against Marseille did not warrant us a place in the final .
12 This being the early days of punk we looked like complete urchins .
13 Similarly , it is reasonable to suppose that many of the haves will be among the most ruthless of society , and will pass on their inhumane ethic to their children , thereby perpetuating it : is this really the future we wish for our species ?
14 As in Darcy 's Utopia , in the future we aspire to .
15 In the future we need to be quicker than the competition and totally focused on customer satisfaction and production requirements .
16 The pure juice of Noah 's vine we came in search of has been rendered impure .
17 ‘ May be to do with that newsflash we heard about the pile-up near Freiburg .
18 The motor car we filled with cowdung in Štanjel
19 There was n't a car we recognized in the lane , we were as surprised to find them as you are to find us . ’
20 The chlorine we detect in the rivers has actually come from the ocean .
21 Refer back to the version of the quantity equation we looked at in Chapter 13 ( page 536 ) .
22 It is proper to end this presentation by returning to the equation we began with .
23 As the restrictions arise in a two-equation model ( rather than the single equation we considered before ) , we now require a method of summarizing the variation in both equation errors so that we can compare an unrestricted with a restricted model .
24 Teller went to extreme lengths to rescue Part I , but in the words of Robert Oppenheimer , ‘ The programme we had in 1949 was a tortured thing that did not make a great deal of technical sense .
25 ‘ There was a radio programme we heard at school , ’ said Ruth .
26 In every television news programme we hear of death , and in every letter or phone call from friends , someone 's death is mentioned .
27 Thanks but no-thanks , we 'd rather make the programme we want to , despite the horrendous budget problems .
28 As Bourn did not boast an anemometer we had to quickly learn wind speed by other means , such as how much or how little the trees were bending in the wind and whether the distant windsock was at full stretch or hanging limply from its staff .
29 ‘ Ceauŝescu was absolutely furious about the opposition we met in trying to recover the bodies .
30 With this broad theme in mind we turn to the subject of International Relations and then to an outline of the book .
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