Example sentences of "and as we have [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Taylor said : ‘ Lawrie spoke to Alex and as we had lost David Batty we were quite short in mid-field .
2 He was definitely a Lamarckian in the sense that he believed in inherited , in the inheritance of acquired characteristics , and as we 've seen , in writing about psychology , he even conceded something of , of Lamarck 's idea about evolution by will .
3 er this rate is fixed and can only be changed by agreement with Brussels er and as we 've seen in the last few years , our normal currency exchange rate has fluctuated quite a lot er and in fact has er become fairly weak , but the green pound has stayed the same so there 's quite a difference between our exchange rate and the green rate .
4 birth and as we 've said before it is often found in abnormal presentation like a breach , bottom first .
5 As I said God did n't leave it like that , because God did in Jesus Christ what we could never do for ourselves , you see you and I at times we felt that I , I want to be different from that and we , and we pushed against one of these pressures and so that we pushed it out a wee bit , but as we 've pushed there it 's come back in somewhere else and as we 've stopped pushing and we 've gone to another bit so that first that has become , has come back as it was and we spend our lives perhaps running around trying to get the circle back again , it 's an impossible task , we ca n't do it , we spend our whole lives in the frustration things and we , and we start blaming on things , if only that situation was different , if only those circumstances were different , but it 's far , far , far more fundamental than that and we 've got ta come to the place where we say well I ca n't do any thing about it , I 've tried my hardest , but I ca n't do it , and that 's where God comes and says hang on a minute I 'll do it for you and that 's what he did in Jesus Christ , he did for us what we could n't do for ourselves , the bible tells us that Christ is the perfect image of God , it 's in Colossians one fifteen and just er full verses further on in verse nineteen it says in him all the fullness of God , in Jesus , all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell and so in Christ God 's son , God dealt with the problem of sin which had caused that twisting and that warping and that distortion , your life and in my life , that which spoiled his image in us he created us in his image , but you 've only got to look at people today , you 've only got to look at ourselves , see , where is the image of God , is that what God is like , jealous , filled with anger , bitterness , envy , is that what God is like , unclean thinking , is that what God is like that 's not his image , but he created us in his image perfect and what Jesus Christ did on the cross , is to restore that image , that original image in you and me , to recreate us in the image of God , so in
6 A garage would be nice and as we 've got two cars so although a garage is vital if we as long as we can get them off the road that would be an advantage
7 and as we 've learnt in first Corinthians chapter fifteen that all different animals have different sorts of flesh , we 've got different flesh than , than different animals have n't we
8 It is my view that when you look at all the locational criteria contained in policy H two and as we 've discussed them , you 'll reach the conclusion that there is one corridor that best meets those criterion , is the A sixty four northeast of York , sector six .
9 And as we have seen , the life-styles of older men and women have been equally varied .
10 And as we have seen , retirement was then much less common , and confined to a restricted social minority .
11 Phenomena are frequently reported at springs and streams , as Lethbridge noted and as we have seen in the context of visions of fairies and the Virgin Mary .
12 This is what masonry is about and as we have seen in Chapter 2 , starting with the simple wall one can go from the arch to the dome and to the most complicated cathedral , keeping everything in compression , or at least trying to do so .
13 Drill will , at best , produce learning and as we have seen , this is only a short term cure .
14 The development of study skills was implicitly or explicitly part of every proposal made for inclusion in the ESSE/L Project , and as we have seen , the major thrust of recent inservice developments has been in this area .
15 But this is so only if we equate democracy with a simple and unrestrained majoritarianism , and as we have seen , there are good democratic reasons for not making that equation .
16 It was not , however , until the Judges ' Rules were revised in 1964 that the protection was related to the moment when the charge was laid ; and as we have seen , the moment at which it attaches has now by Code C been further advanced .
17 Tilly ( 1975 ) poses the important question of why political development in Western Europe took the course it did , when other options were still open ; and as we have seen , he singles out a number of specific circumstances which , in that time and place , favoured the creation of nation states .
18 And as we have seen , predicted changes in aggregate demand will have no effect on real output , or real economic activity — they will only affect prices .
19 The initial onus will be on the employee as applicant to demonstrate an outstanding benefit to the employer ; and as we have seen , this is no easy task .
20 Sometimes this will be the organisation , but this is usually too ambitious for detailed study , and as we have seen the organisation will normally be divided into local areas for separate analysis .
21 This does not mean , of course , that they will fall to pieces at a touch and as we have said , some brittle substances are very strong .
22 Despite this , there are still long waiting lists for urgent adult admissions to mental handicap hospitals , and as we have noted the numbers of adults in mental handicap hospitals are only falling slowly .
23 We shall see that there are other indications that the Belfast /a/ system was formerly more inclined to the front than it is now , and as we have noted above , the EModE front-raising rule may have affected some dialects later than others .
24 As agricultural methods improved and the dwelling could be more permanent the tent was made with stone and as we have shown there are the remains of such hut circles in a number of places .
25 As agricultural methods improved and the dwelling could be more permanent the tent was made with stone and as we have shown there are the remains of such hut circles in a number of places .
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