Example sentences of "that we [vb mod] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 So these are , these are summaries of example units that we might do which either exist already or might be made to exist quite
2 Also , if you have any comments on the booklet or can think of ways that we might improve it , we 'd be pleased to hear from you .
3 There was a possibility that we might record it some years ago — such great music , no wonder Wagner was overwhelmed by it !
4 But after 30 years we are getting used to the idea that we might finish our lives together . ’
5 Omar learnt that he was related to the Sultan , and we hoped that we might persuade him to provide us with a guide to Aussa .
6 It has been suggested that we might put our prayer list on the Overseas Board in church instead of the monthly missionary society 's display , or as well .
7 The garment is so peculiar that we might dismiss it as a quirk of the rhyton carver 's imagination , but for the fact that it features again on a seal impression from Agia Triadha , where the rhyton also originated .
8 Yet God still speaks by his Spirit to throw fresh light on his word so that we might see its relevance to the contemporary world , and he speaks to his servants to guide them through the perplexities of life .
9 Come that we might see you in the people of every race , and commit ourselves to the hope that we celebrate our life together in true community and justice .
10 Both the Daily Mail and the Daily Mirror said that we might take our opposition to the point of resignation .
11 But there is nowhere else that we might get our conception of the physical world from , other than perception .
12 To begin to call out to God to fill us with his Spirit that we might know him better is what is needed .
13 And lead us that we might know your will mor clearly , and desire to follow it more fully .
14 And it 's just because we hate it that we 'll beat you .
15 and erm sorry the poem the new poem , but that we 'll spell it with a will be correct .
16 But we could n't make anybody do it , you know they 'd say , anyway that we 'll do it , there 's there 's next week they would n't catch you up some of them .
17 He 'll be clinging to the hope that we 'll keep his father 's bones safe for our part — and Isambard he wants for his own . ’
18 ‘ My guess is that we 'll get him if we play by its rules for a while . ’
19 ‘ Tell that brother of yours that we 'll catch him in the end so he might as well give himself up . ’
20 All I 'm saying is that we 'll overdo it if we have the … ’
21 They hurt , sometimes excruciatingly , but on the deepest level of all , it is somehow ‘ all right ’ ; and out of the praise and gratitude and joy that spring from it when we can grasp it , I think that we may give ourselves permission for the more mundane , but wonderfully healing emotion of happiness .
22 Most schools that have gone grant maintained have declined to use the D S O. Now my concern is , erm that we 're not actually , when we come and compare with the outside world , we 're not actually giving the service that we may think we are .
23 The book begins , with the description of father and son at the latter 's birth ; the following paragraph is so formal in its rhetorical design , balancing each element of Mr Dombey 's description against a similar element of the description of Paul , that we may set it out in tabular form ( reading the columns from left to right ) : This is a brief glimpse of one kind of language which recurs at intervals throughout the book , especially at symbolic and ceremonial points in the fortunes of the Dombey family : births , funerals , and marriages .
24 We get quite used to our domestic dog actually bringing us sticks and balls so that we may throw them for our four-legged companion to retrieve .
25 In traditional moral thought hypocrisy , like lying , has always been detested as a sin against the fundamental principle of human communication , namely that language was given to mankind so that we may express our thoughts and feelings openly , honestly .
26 We also urge our sisters to help us reopen our educational institutions so that we may rescue our future generations from the disasters of ignorance and illiteracy which are threatening our children .
27 Let us pray that we may develop our ability to feel compassion .
28 We need to bring them into the light and recognise them so that we may dispatch them . ’
29 ‘ With nothing left to fight about ’ , wrote Brailsford in 1914 , ‘ our chief concern is that we may have something to fight with . ’
30 Furthermore , as far as skinhead paraphernalia is concerned , is n't Morrissey telling his fans ( supposedly alienated from society 's mainstream ) that we may have something in common with the frightening skinheads ?
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