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

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1 He puts great emphasis on the difficulties of prediction , and urges that where there are rules to which people do in fact adhere for the most part , and which help maintain the social stability required for any kind of good to flourish , we are likely to come nearest to doing what is objectively right ( in terms of its actual consequences ) if we also stick to the rules , but that where the rules , however useful they would be if generally obeyed , are widely flouted we should make a direct judgement of what will have the best consequences .
2 My Lords , I er apologise first of all that I was not able to hear some of the earlier speeches in this Debate erm but it does seem to me a most interesting Debate and I have to confess that I always become slightly uneasy er when the great and the good , and I suppose we should collectively cast ourselves in that role of being the great and good of the establishment are all of one view and I wonder whether it is necessarily right and so I begin to question er whether your Lordships enthusiasm for many of these amendments and their attack upon the Government 's proposals is necessarily as soundly based as we might think if we just listen to casually to it all .
3 Because we , even if we ever came to a final close if
4 If we ever got to a siege economy he , Jim , dreaded the effect on our democracy .
5 Vigno , who had served with the 2ème Régiment Étranger de Parachutistes , intimated that if we ever got to Corsica we would be expected to do it in under forty minutes .
6 if we ever thought to ourselves what we 're doing
7 But if we then turn to the ego — and , still more , the superego — and try to understand the sequence of development there we may find ourselves in the predicament of a person who tried to investigate the musical education of a child who had started learning the piano with grade 2 , then gone on to grade 3 , and finally ended with grade 1 !
8 Thank you Okay , if we then move to agenda item two .
9 If we now return to F , R and find it too complex ( which it is ) , our experience with the slice moves suggests we consider F 2 , R 2 .
10 However , if we premultiply ( 6 ) by AT as in ( 4 ) we get unc and the solution , by inspection , is x = { 1 , -2,1 } , i.e. unc If we now return to ( 6 ) and use this solution , we find unc which compares very favourably with the result given earlier .
11 If we now return to the basic theory of the ego , we can follow Freud in seeing it as subject to three often conflicting demands : that of the instinctual drives of the id , that of the values of the superego , and that of reality .
12 If we now turn to a consideration of the social consequences of failure at the phallic stage of Oedipal resolution combined with inadequate superego-development and regressive fixations , we will see that all forms of behaviour which represent aggression directed at the father are the consequence of the fundamental failure to renounce the mother as a love-object .
13 If we now proceed to the process of back-substitution , this is in effect operating again with rows , and all it does is to compete the process which was done continuously in the pivotal condensation of 2.2.1 .
14 Now , if we round off to three decimal places , we find that F can be written as the unit rank matrix , proportional to unc unc If we now revert to A and postmultiply by unc unc Thus , 1 = 25 .
15 ‘ The British diet has started to change , but a far greater rate of progress can be achieved if we now shift to a positive message about what to eat , rather than going down the old road of saying do n't eat certain foods .
16 If we now add to this the possibility that those units or sectors experiencing a fall in supply switch to borrowing from banks , the money supply will increase .
17 We can make it , if we really want to . ’
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