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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 As we noted at the beginning of the chapter , white , middle-class churches in Britain have a poor ‘ track record ’ on relating to artisan , West Indian and Asian cultures .
2 As we noted at the start , the policy concerns of the country in which academics work are an important factor in determining the kind of International Relations that they will study .
3 As we noted at the beginning of this chapter , because there is no consensus either among or between the different sectors of the village population over the answers to these questions , any overall conclusion about ‘ loss of community ’ is impossible .
4 As we noted in the previous chapter , the nation of Israel occupied a central place in the realisation of this hope , serving as the gathering-point of the nations ( Isa. 24:23 ; Zech. 14:9 ; Obad. 21 ) .
5 As we noted in Chapter 2 many unions regarded themselves as being part of a socialist-oriented labour movement directed towards a fundamental reconstruction of society .
6 As we noted in Chapter 1 , both forms of reward can have a marked effect on behaviour .
7 As we noted in the last chapter , to say that a decision or action is subject to judicial review is to say that it can be challenged on the basis of the rules and principles of public law which define the grounds of judicial review .
8 Government expenditure G is determined by political decisions , as we noted in Chapter 6 .
9 Local government has its origins , as we noted in Chapter 2 , in the growing urbanisation of the nineteenth century .
10 The consequence has been an explosion of FDI flows among the developed countries , as we noted in chapter 1 .
11 As we noted in the introduction , however , problems arise as soon as one enquires about the relationship between ‘ science ’ and ‘ religion ’ in the past .
12 Accounts given by individuals are inevitably selective in content and emphasis , and as we noted in Chapter 3 , the attribution of change to particular policies or causal factors is always difficult .
13 This situation was most characteristic , as we noted in section 2.3 , of the less urbanized regions of the south of the country .
14 As we noted in Chapter 1 , level is an elusive concept , difficult to objectify without formal procedures of initial admission and final assessment .
15 ( It is this shift which , as we noted in the Introduction , supplies the chief rationale for this book . )
16 As we noted in Chapter 2 , James Caird , writing in 1878 , drew attention to the differences between the agriculture practised in the predominantly pastoral North and West of England and that in the mainly arable South and East , a division which affected the organization and conditions of village life in the two regions .
17 Yet as we noted in our tenth report : ‘ The price that some children may pay for demanding little of the teacher may be that they are given work which demands little of them ’ ( Alexander et al .
18 As we noted in our fifth report :
19 As we noted in Fig. 15.2 and Table 15.2 , the ratio has risen since then under the influence of recessionary conditions .
20 As we noted in Chapter 10 , oligopolists have an incentive to carry out socially unproductive advertising in order to make it harder for new entrants to meet the fixed costs of breaking into the industry , thereby leaving more of the market and the profit for existing firms .
21 But we can not explain why this is always objectionable , so long as we remain on the plane of justice as I have defined it .
22 However , so long as we remain in the Community , Parliament has effectively handed over a number of functions that it has traditionally fulfilled .
23 ‘ We are very comfortable at Government House and Lady Franklin will not hear of our going from it so long as we remain in town .
24 We bring to our working relationships the same potential for disordered conduct as we bring to any other area of our lives .
25 As we argued in the previous chapter , this profits squeeze fundamentally reflected overaccumulation .
26 As we argued throughout the proceedings of the European parliamentary elections bill , the Conservatives are entirely responsible for the fact that this process of drawing up the new European boundaries had to be compressed into such a short time .
27 As we wait at the station are we still counting the cost , and weighing consequences in the balance ?
28 All this I learn from the bus driver who chats to me as we wait for the traffic ahead to move .
29 What follows , while by no means comprehensive , is NME 's guide to the world blown wide open by the greatest war movies , a world we 'd like to see on TV as we wait for the next one .
30 As we wait for Christ to be revealed we do not know when he will appear .
  Next page