Example sentences of "[noun] that the [noun] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Although vertical transmission down the archives of the species is ultimately what ‘ success ’ means , the criterion for success is normally the action that the genes have on bodies , by means of their sideways transmission .
2 Re last few What about those particlarly nasty songs that the scum sing about Don Revie having Motor Neurone disease .
3 Bassist Norman Watt Roy , who was the power behind Ian Dury and has a set of eye-baggage that must be the envy of Barry Norman , puts so much into thumping out a rhythm that the sweat drips from the end of his guitar .
4 It does not take much imagination to understand the depth of grief that the parents feel at the loss of their baby .
5 It was partly by successfully organising joint local production of its exchanges in Ekaterinburg that the firm succeeded at the expense of NEC .
6 Then he strode from the room , passing her chair without even glancing at her , and slamming the door with such force that the chandelier rattled above the table .
7 The ladle hit the stew with such force that the liquid splashed onto the white tablecloth , and , almost stuttering now , Alice cried , ‘ What a thing to say !
8 As the evaluation of both the Major and Minor Projects shows , teachers in project schools did argue with force that the use made of the library by both teachers and pupils had increased in volume and changed in kind .
9 On collecting these names I began to wonder whether I was being taken in but so many came up on independent lists that the villagers sent in that I am sure they are authentic .
10 If both deposits and loans are non-indexed , the losses that the banks make on their loans are compensated by the losses that their depositors make on their deposits .
11 In the result , it was agreed between the Commissioners and the defendant that the amount charged upon him should be reduced , and that time should be given to pay it in three instalments ; he gave three promissory notes for the three instalments ; the first was duly honoured ; the others were not , and were the subject of the present action .
12 The use of chronology in historical writing , or in literary history , gives the illusion that the whole operates by a uniform , continuous progression , a linear series in which each event takes its place .
13 The financial measures which led to the crisis of 1340–1 and the grievances that the commons laid before parliament in 1339 and 1340 , have been analysed in great detail .
14 An allegation that the problem lies with the client 's own computer installation might be difficult to refute .
15 We share the Government 's disappointment that the provisions introduced by the 1981 Town and Country Planning ( Minerals ) Act , have not been widely used .
16 The golfer is as anxious to see the result that the head rises before impact , causing a lifting action of the whole body .
17 The option of allowing the appeal , with the result that the child moves at once to open accommodation , is not one that was seriously pressed upon me by Mr. Wildblood , for whose skilful and moderate submissions I am grateful .
18 Owls , like most birds of prey , start incubating their eggs as soon as they are laid with the result that the chicks hatch at different times .
19 Yet , the very thesis that all questions of law should be for the ordinary courts itself fashions the result that the court believes to be correct .
20 This was going too far for the established church in both Rome and Nicaragua , with the result that the Pope called for their resignation .
21 It accelerated more than anticipated with the result that the capsule landed in the Atlantic over a hundred miles away from the target area .
22 In other words , firms prodded and assisted by governments , were becoming more productive and were making many of their workers redundant with the result that the numbers employed in manufacturing industry fell by 14 per cent between 1965 and 1975 .
23 The Afghanistan that the Russians left in February has little prospect of becoming a golden land .
24 Page 2 of the consultation paper refers to the guidelines that the Government considered for the new council tax .
25 The ‘ climate of the place ’ is , however , only one part of the equation : the other is the state of mind that the person brings to it .
26 It is helpful to bear in mind that the persons affected by insider dealing who may seek civil remedies are : companies in whose shares insider dealing has taken place ; shareholders of those companies ; or outsiders who trade with insiders .
27 You do need to bear in mind that the figures vary from place to place .
28 Bearing in mind that the accounts refer to the period up to the end of July , 1991 , then there are no prizes for guessing where the Jim Willis cash went to .
29 Also , bear in mind that the components removed from circuit boards are likely to have very short leadouts that might prevent them from fitting into the component layouts of your projects .
30 It should be borne in mind that the material comes from the same general cultural context as the young lady who had been " married " seven times before she was nineteen .
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