Example sentences of "[prep] [n mass] that " in BNC.

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1 We see through jellyfish that are ghostly pale blue outlines in the water .
2 There is a relevant distinction here between data that are independent of the evaluator 's own judgements and data that are not .
3 Folk rock for folk that have forgotten the folk bit .
4 But er do you quite like singing for folk that know you ?
5 A , a notoriously loose-living man , offers to refrain from publishing his memoirs in a Sunday newspaper , if B will give him £1,000 in recompense for the loss of the fee of £1,000 that he would receive from the newspaper .
6 ‘ Ah well , ’ said Rory , slowing to avoid a pair of sheep that had come dribbling across the road .
7 But the most controversial move is a clause aimed at recovering levy from the suppliers of sheep that are slaughtered in other countries .
8 That is setting a low pass mark themselves which they can easily achieve , whilst being demotivated when having to attempt to obtain a pass mark of 80% that a lecturer has set .
9 In the place of the marble fantasies they tore down , the British erected some of the most crushingly ugly buildings ever thrown up by the British Empire — a set of barracks that look as if they have been modelled on Wormwood Scrubs .
10 This side of the issue was entrusted to Lord Brabazon of Tara , whose committee was invited to make recommendations on the types of aircraft that Britain should produce for the postwar period .
11 The aircraft is an example of aircraft that ‘ call-in ’ for engine attention care of CFS
12 Arthur Pearcy 's book US Coast Guard Aircraft Since 1916 is a history of the Guard comprising detailed descriptions of over 90 different types of aircraft that they have operated over the years , coupled with information on the designation systems and the colours and markings used by this fifth military air arm of the United States .
13 This is a type of aircraft that really reminds you what your feet are for .
14 Whilst most are pretty careful about the actual type of aircraft that they are about to buy , the average understanding of the financing of the purchase is often more akin to a fantasy adventure .
15 Scientists worldwide are facing the ever-increasing dilemma of how to handle vast quantities of data that advances in high technology have made it possible to generate .
16 The most difficult part of the exercise , apart from handling the sheer volume of data that was being produced , was deciding what was meant by ‘ monitor and control ’ for each system element , and then drawing out the related information .
17 The analysts encountered many problems in the process of bridging this gap , but each problem was addressed in turn and an appropriate solution found , generally by making imaginative use of computer software to record and manipulate the mass of data that was produced as the analysis progressed .
18 It may also include instructions to observe particularly unusual sources ; to repeat collection of data that have been lost or spoilt in some way ; or to take corrective actions based on data already received .
19 France scores a lot higher than the UK in legislation to protect individuals against the misuse of data that could threaten privacy .
20 However , such hypotheses are expected to emerge from the research as it goes along , rather than be specified from the start and used as a guide to the kind of data that is sought and collected .
21 The very profusion of data that becomes available from a DFDR itself poses a problem in terms of the number of data points to be considered and even the many sheets of paper containing them that need to be handled .
22 This facility can be used to indicate individual items in a set of data that have to be treated in a special way , different from the majority of items in the set ; a special case is " undefined " items , which have not as yet been assigned a value .
23 LEFT Computers and other electronic devices are now essential tools in archaeology for handling the vast amounts of data that fieldwork produces .
24 Limits may be imposed on the amounts of data that can be trafficked at certain periods of the day , forcing the designer to re-configure his search to produce a more precise response or await its arrival " in the mail " .
25 Ember would n't even tell her what from , but she could sense through the flux of data that came from her paling blue awareness that the others had something planned for her , something that she did n't want .
26 Some kinds of syntactic analysis require corpuses of data that in practice are probably too large to analyse by hand .
27 By 1857 when Agassiz 's Essay on Classification appeared , as an introduction to a never-completed work on the natural history of the USA , it was already difficult to believe that Noah 's flood had really been a world-wide catastrophe with animals surviving two by two ; indeed Agassiz 's work on ice ages had involved reinterpretation of data that seemed evidence of the Flood .
28 Yes , this is another big problem I think you put that very well , that people forget , of course , that in clinical psychoan analysis the analyst has a vast amount of data , because the patient is going five times a week , or in Freud 's case , six times a week , for fifty minutes every day , six days a week , nine months of the year , often for several years and er , the , the sheer amount of data that the analyst gets , is absolutely immense .
29 It has been argued that there is a chunk of data that must be retained about each record : Where was the document created ?
30 Using an example of e-mail the paper demonstrates the sorts of data that are lost to history .
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