Example sentences of "we [modal v] [adv] [verb] to " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Listening involves hearing what is left unsaid as well as the words actually spoken and to hear in that way requires the sort of attention that , sadly , we may rarely offer to our own nearest and dearest .
2 Er , because also yo you really do n't wan na play like three consecutive Sundays , but on some of you these yo we may even have to .
3 Occasionally we may even write to — or about — the author to say what his books mean to us .
4 We may also refer to a writer like Meiklejohn ( 1909 ) ; his book is an excellent work of its kind , and despite the oft-repeated claims of more recent linguists that previous investigators had seriously neglected syntax , that subject receives no fewer than seventy pages in his treatment ( even when the allocation of words to word-classes is excluded ) .
5 In these few words we may only point to the kaleidoscope of enthusiasm and activity by secondees that has been generated across the country in such a short space of time .
6 We may now return to the examples ( 50 ) and ( 51 ) .
7 Clearly , though , the use of observation schedules is putting more control on the behaviour of the observer , so we may now turn to a consideration of what happens when we go further along that axis .
8 We may now turn to Figures 3 and 4 , which are the actual stress distribution maps which John computed for a crack 2 microns long and 1 Ångström tip radius .
9 The blue-green pillars of Hamelin Pool are living stromatolites and the groups of them standing on the sun-dappled sea-floor are as close as we may ever get to a scene from the world of two thousand million years ago .
10 At root , the educational changes with which we are engaged are fuelled by rapidly changing socio-economic patterns , and the particular political drive given to these at the moment is of much less importance ( in anything other than the short term ) than we may often feel to be the case .
11 We should rather refer to economic processes which are constituted in a particular place , which of course does not make them local .
12 Presume we we should also write to Peter and ask him if he 's got any spare safety money to er
13 Before leaving philosophical treatments of indexicals , we should just point to a subject of deep theoretical importance which lies well beyond the scope of this book — namely , the connection of indexical reference to the fundamentals of reference in general .
14 And we should perhaps add to this list of discourses the critical one which organises an anecdote , which may not have taken place at all , to re-iterate a point about Shakespeare and power .
15 I was wondering if we ought to find out who 's decided to start using it again , and whether they really checked , I have been told they check on the source , but it 's like we 're slipping back gradually , and I thought if we said , if we pledged that we 're going to boycott timber , we should really keep to it unless we make a decision
16 We should now turn to the second question that I raised , whether Quinean epistemology is , in fact , sufficiently continuous with traditional Epistemology to provide the self-consciousness about his practice desired by the reflective inquirer ( see Putnam 1982 ) .
17 To understand why , if it is not logically necessary , our modern Cabinet developed , we must again turn to history .
18 Pluralism we discuss separately in Chapter 5 , but before concluding this chapter we must briefly refer to the subsequent history of elitism .
19 We must equally demonstrate to Government our fitness to undertake the important work of managing nuclear activities on their behalf safely and cost-effectively .
20 Godwin also offered guidance on moral problems ; we must always look to the general good , calculate the consequences of the courses of action open to us , and arrive at an unbiased decision .
21 We must now return to the principal official argument for Indirect Rule and look at it more closely .
22 But we must now return to England to consider briefly part of the lively contribution to the developments we are discussing made by Sir Edward Tylor ( 1832–1917 ) .
23 We must now return to the general situation in which 5 Corps found itself at the end of 15 May .
24 We must now look to the future .
25 The question we must now turn to is : can one of the subsidiary arguments for the justification of authority supplement the main argument and show that at least the authority of relatively just governments is as wide as they claim it to be ?
26 Whilst the Bill of Rights thus resolved the basic position for the future , it nevertheless left several questions unanswered and we must now turn to these :
27 We must now turn to those instructions which control the order in which these data.manipulation instructions are executed .
28 We must now turn to the only authentic documents which can be dated between 167 and 164 B.C. and show the progress of the persecution : the petition of the Samaritans of Shechem to Antiochus IV which is reported by Flavius Josephus ( Ant .
29 But no one explanation will suffice for all women in all communities , and we must therefore proceed to the other suggestions that have been made .
30 We 'll also go to the park where there 's nobody else
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