Example sentences of "we point out " in BNC.

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1 The unbeliever supposes that the believer must have proofs of the existence of God ( as we point out below , there is some disagreement over whether some of the traditional ‘ proofs ’ of God 's existence were intended as proofs at all ) .
2 17.25 As we point out in paragraph 14.5 children do not learn particular features of written language once and for all at a particular stage .
3 The photos to the right illustrate a good weight transfer , while below we point out two indications of bad weight transference which will result in thinned shots .
4 We point out the danger signs
5 And the main things that we point out there are we have a nice natural flow system .
6 The problem , as we point out over and over again , is not the resources themselves , but the way they are distributed .
7 In Section 7.3 , we point out that an earlier finding of this text means that a very widespread traditional way of thinking about restriction is incorrect ; we also look at the interaction between the notion of restriction and associatives , sense- qualifiers and separatives .
8 However , we point out that the Diphtheria Reference Laboratory is not part of the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre , Colindale , as they suggest .
9 This really is committee work but I , it does occur to me that mention it that erm , if in our advertising we point out that we have a car park attendant and if that car park attendant were to let one slip through his fingers me were , we may well then be liable to be sued by the person who
10 I I have to say that we we I I we just we just see that we point out to people it 's an even bigger po position of trust .
11 Finally , we point out the main limitations of the theory and briefly introduce the more recent ‘ neo-classical ’ resurgence in the shape of ‘ monetarism ’ .
12 In case anyone should question these financial allocations , can we point out that they only move the film and crafts sectors towards the level of support long enjoyed in England and Wales .
13 As we pointed out at the beginning of this campaign , the Labour Party proposes nothing less than to pull up Britain by the roots .
14 But we pointed out , first , that the hypothesis of formative causation , if true , would be extremely important ; and secondly that it was , in contrast to the crackpot ideas with which Nature ( vol 90 , p 749 ) confused it , open to experiment .
15 In Chapter 1 , we defined unemployment as the number of people who are willing and able to work but are unable to find jobs and we pointed out that the unemployment percentage ( or rate of unemployment ) is the number of people unemployed expressed as a percentage of the labour force .
16 In Chapter 1 , we defined inflation as a persistent rise in the average level of prices and we pointed out that in the UK the rate of inflation is normally measured as the annual percentage increase in the Retail Price Index .
17 In section 6.1 , we referred to the empirical breakdown of the original Phillips curve in the late 1960s and we pointed out that one explanation for this involves bringing inflationary expectations into the argument .
18 In May 1987 , we pointed out in New Socialist that Labour 's leaders would have to take on electoral reform and come to a pre-election accommodation with the Alliance if they seriously wanted to win the election .
19 We pointed out that unless an appeal is lodged within 28 days of the sentencing he could be free in a little over two years .
20 In 1989 we pointed out that : ‘ Africa is changing .
21 In Chapter 4 , we pointed out that the profile of the known sample group was skewed away from the ‘ typical ’ young unemployed heroin chaser identified by the prevalence study because of the very nature of being a ‘ known ’ user in treatment .
22 In considering variant realizations of the same message , we pointed out what seemed to be the stylistic values of the original and of the alternatives , and in passing gave reasons why none of the variants were quite so satisfactory as the original .
23 I we pointed out that deictic elements of the utterances can only be interpreted with respect to the context in which they are uttered .
24 In our discussion in 2.2.2 , we pointed out the effect of ‘ co-text ’ in limiting the interpretation of what follows .
25 Similarly , certain facts about the speaker and hearer , as we pointed out earlier , have to be included .
26 As we pointed out then , although a stretch of discourse can appear to be largely concerned with a single individual , or one discourse subject , so that the discourse may be loosely reported as being ‘ about ’ that individual , this should not lead us to claim that all discourses are about single individuals or can be given convenient one-word titles .
27 As we pointed out earlier , the kind of model for insider evaluation that Shipman proposes has a long history and there is little evidence that it has been significantly displaced by newer alternatives .
28 As we pointed out in Chapter 1 , the school was right in its prediction !
29 But as we pointed out at the beginning of this chapter , the courts are only one of a series– of filters regulating access to the criminal justice and penal processes and , as such , they are also affected by decisions taken elsewhere in the system .
30 Both are paid according to hours booked , but , as we pointed out earlier , there is an increasing tendency for the big agencies to offer secretarial/office staff such fringe benefits as sickness and holiday pay .
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