Example sentences of "[pron] we have [adv] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 How different it is when someone , perhaps someone close to us , perhaps someone we have never met , helps us to view the world through different eyes .
2 Unless it was somebody we have already used , and that really boils down to one person in York , and she 's shown no signs of applying , so .
3 One reason why we are determined not to have a Labour Government is that they might tip the balance in the Community towards a fortress Europe and against the forces of free trade which we have successfully orchestrated so far .
4 You will understand when I say that I should like a poem to stand as preface to your book , a poem which we have both admired so much , Thomas Hardy 's ‘ Afterwards ’ .
5 The appearance of surface currents ( which we have previously denoted by K ) .
6 The labelled probe used in these assays was a sequence derived from the herpes simplex virus immediate-early 1 gene which we have previously shown to be a high affinity binding site for octamer binding proteins ( 18 ) .
7 The introduction of automated office systems could carry these processes still further , thus undermining many of the assumptions and procedures which we have conventionally applied to archival work ( Gavrel 1990 : Hedstrom 1991 ) .
8 Povey and Sir W. Batten and I by water to Woolwich ; and there saw an experiment made of Sir R. Ford 's Holland 's yarn ( about which we have lately made so much stir ; and I have much concerned myself of our rope-maker , Mr Hughes who represented it so bad ) and we found it to be very bad , and broke sooner than , upon a fair triall , five threads of that against four of Riga yarne ; also that some of it had old stuffe that had been tarred , covered over with new hempe , which is such a cheat as has not been heard of .
9 In order to take account of this , we are going to need some way of making appeals to notions like ‘ shared presuppositions ’ , 'encyclopedic knowledge' , ‘ intention / purpose in uttering ’ and ‘ experience of previous similar text ’ which we have simply appealed to in an ad hoc way in our discussion so far .
10 And without such plea , none of the background to the case to which we have briefly alluded can ever be placed before the jury : the only issues arising would be whether or no the publication was defamatory and , if so , what should the damages be .
11 Anselm fought for it with a tenacity which is only explicable if the whole scene which we have briefly surveyed is borne in mind : the primacy was the brightest of the dreams which the monks of Canterbury had inherited from their largely silent , ever-beckoning past , and on this question Anselm fell under the spell of the awe-inspiring tradition which he had helped to preserve .
12 However , it should be borne in mind that for most Marxists an interpretation of historical ( or dialectical ) materialism , which we have briefly discussed above , provides some degree of overarching methodological coherence to Marxism .
13 And that within that Mind — of which all individual minds are a part — there are ‘ laws ’ , processes and relationships , the ramifications of which we have barely glimpsed .
14 These chemical reactions would normally proceed very slowly were it not for Nature 's invention of complex molecules called enzymes , which we have also met before in this chapter .
15 The incident mentioned by the hon. Lady is clearly deplorable , as are the deportations that occur from time to time and the closures of universities , about which we have also protested .
16 In this , Ancient Society resembled the other evolutionary schemes for the history of mankind which we have just noted .
17 We propose , for convenience , to deal in turn with the three issues to which we have just referred .
18 Only individuals can fill out questionnaires , be interviewed , respond to attitude scales , be observed , and so on , and yet , very often , these are used as evidence for , or descriptions of , the supra-individual phenomena to which we have just referred .
19 We now come to the second part of our programme , according to our agenda , which has the broad heading , Achiev N C V O Achievements and Intentions , and it 's obviously a natural follow-on from the I er , A G M which we have just completed , at which council received the annual report of N C V O's work for the past year , and its use of the resources which are available to it to carry out that work .
20 This is precisely what has been happening in recent years , to such an extent that we can without exaggeration speak of a ‘ committals explosion ’ in addition to the remand explosion which we have just outlined .
21 The ability to draw on such knowledge is an essential aspect of discourse interpretation and it is often employed by subjects in the kind of memory experiments which we have just described .
22 For this to happen , aggressive drives , directed away from the father on to others in the manner which we have just described , would have had to become internalized also and turned , not against some other , but back against the
23 We can allow for this effect by dropping the two from the strength equation which we have just derived , bearing in mind that we are in no position to quibble about exact values .
24 Proposed changes to the way in which we have traditionally served our members .
25 Rhythmic patterns tend to be sober and square-cut , and that liking for the C mode — as such , e.g. in Clemens 's Missa Misericorde , s or transposed to F with a B flat key-signature — which we have already noticed in Josquin , becomes very pronounced .
26 The use of anthropology which we have already noted can be called historical .
27 As a result , the evidence for this second stage in the history of marriage depends entirely on the two assumptions which we have already noted .
28 This is a crucial proposition which we have already noted and which will be discussed again later in this book .
29 Our first task now is to continue the reforms which we have already begun . ’
30 Lévi-Strauss focuses on the ambivalence which we have already seen to be such a distinctive feature of the Critique , pointing in particular to Sartre 's vacillation between two concepts of dialectical reason .
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