Example sentences of "[noun] [noun] [conj] they [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 The architects duly made economies , although they were dismayed that these had to include the reduction to a dwarf wall of the high wall intended for the street side of the car park because they felt that the omission of a high wall at this point would detract from the character of Rotherhithe Street .
2 Hundreds of enthusiasts maintain their old Healeys in showroom condition because they feel that there 's never been another car like it .
3 The section entitles a board to make a closure order where they consider that the licensed premises are no longer suitable for the sale of liquor .
4 In other words , some women defined themselves out of the labour market because they felt that they were unlikely to get paid work or because they believed that they had no right to paid work .
5 There is unfortunately a mistaken view held by many councillors that they are free to state what they wish in council meetings for they imagine that the council meeting is a completely privileged occasion .
6 Neither will sit side by side with Sinn Fein because they do not concede the right of anyone to bomb their way to the conference table and they fear that , if the talks hit problems , Sinn Fein would once again resort to violence to get its way .
7 If they have come to an arrangement with British Rail under the bus substitution programme and they consider that they are not getting enough money , there will be no cosy chats or friendly discussions in the board room , they will be absolutely ruthless and cut the services .
8 They say the economists ' approach is winning a greater acceptance among doctors and health service managers because they appreciate that money is limited and choices have to be made on where it should be spent .
9 I asked that the link road from to Lane , which had been omitted , should be included in the town plan and Councillor has written on that matter to District Council and they agreed that it should be .
10 It is not surprising , therefore , that it is very stressful for CAB advice workers when they find that there are times when they are unable to help certain clients .
11 In Nigeria they are called Medical Extension Officers as they feel that they are not assistants as such but great contributors to health care .
12 Physicians may favour age criteria because they believe that the elderly are unlikely to benefit from treatment , that any benefit these patients enjoy will be of short duration , or that a diminished quality of life after treatment negates any possible benefit .
13 told a Gallup poll that they believed that they would pay more tax under a Labour Government and 59 per cent .
14 However , institutions may put forward proposals for fully integrated courses in any subject areas where they believe that a case can be made .
15 ‘ If ’ , argues Conklin ( 1977 : 94 ) , ‘ businessmen feel ideologically deprived by government regulation because they think that the law is unfair and unduly restrictive of the economic forces to which they have a strong commitment , they may violate the law ’ .
16 In 1975 , one-third of the total number of members covered by occupational pension schemes were in schemes which had equal pension ages and they hoped that even without legislation this number would be increased by negotiation and voluntary agreement .
17 The offer is there and is open to senior police officers if they believe that such batons would be of advantage to their forces .
18 of people in that wider community told a Harris poll that they believed that Labour would raise the basic rate of tax , 57 per cent .
19 Can you remember how we talked about the Romans having a very strong army and how they captured land around Rome around it 's lake and before long they 'd captured land all around the Mediterranean Sea and they formed that into what we call the Roman Empire .
20 told an NOP survey that they thought that their take-home pay would be hit .
21 Investors rushed into the shares of the Amerada Hess oil company when they heard that its chairman Mr Leon Hess , 75 , had gone to hospital .
22 For example , most people will not mind waiting a few extra minutes in a hospital waiting room if they know that the doctor has been called away to deal with an emergency .
23 And what you might need to start thinking about as well is how could you illustrate some of these , already around you in the room , going up , work from year nine where they have started writing that as a complaint to god , moaning about Hurricane Andrew , about earthquakes and floods and so on and they 've decided that they 're going to illustrate the work they 're doing with these paper cuttings of disasters and problems in the world , there 's one up here about a gorilla that 's been taken from the wild and is in captivity in London Zoo and they said that they think it 's wrong .
24 Patients in their study initially had no clinical or echocardiographic evidence of heart disease and they suggest that the QT interval abnormalities may have been early indicators of alcohol-induced myocardial toxicity .
25 These are all traditional set operators and they require that all relations included in one operation have the same degree , that is , they have the same number of columns ( referred to as union compatibility ) .
26 NO PLACE ‘ There are those who argue the Secretary of State was wrong to grant consent to Wilton power station and they say that , because he was wrong consent , should be refused for transmission connections , ’ he said .
27 In a drastic curtailment of the appeal process for condemned prisoners , federal courts would be required to deny appeals against state-imposed death sentences if they determined that the prisoner had received a " full and fair " trial .
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