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

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1 Then , grasping the shoe and using its heel as a club , smite the biscuit tin lid with such force that it flies across the room and the egg plops into the glass , unbroken .
2 Barking ferociously , the big Great Dane rushed from the rear of the house , skidded around the corner and hurled herself at the gate with such force that it creaked under the impact .
3 If tourism is to be properly recognised as Scotland 's largest employer , and recognised for the very considerable revenue that it brings into the country , it must first be given higher priority within the Scottish Office itself .
4 The hon. Member for Foyle ( Mr. Hume ) has , much more eloquently than I could , told us of the damage that it does and the effect that it has on the young people of Northern Ireland because it gives them a future of either migration or unemployment .
5 Within Renaissance writing we can discover evidence which reveals that a text 's recognition that it circulates within a powerful institutional context need not be capitulation to context , but its own powerful representation of that context .
6 Accordingly , the factors to be taken into account in deciding whether a government exists as the government of a state are : ( a ) whether it is the constitutional government of the state ; ( b ) the degree , nature and stability of administrative control , if any , that it of itself exercises over the territory of the state ; ( c ) whether Her Majesty 's Government has any dealings with it and if so what is the nature of those dealings ; and ( d ) in marginal cases , the extent of international recognition that it has as the government of the state .
7 Apart from a small stain on the edge this came up in almost the bright and shiny condition that it appears in the illustration .
8 The authors , stress on cognition has the advantage that it leads to an appreciation of the importance of the distribution of knowledge about what goods should represent , rather than merely of the distribution of the goods themselves .
9 Their task is to so translate the text that it speaks with the original intention and force as it did to those originally addressed .
10 It is one of the unhappy paradoxes of the Whitehall market-place that it reacts to the goad of strong , abrasive ministers like Duncan Sandys , whose revolutionary ideas it detests , and yet is slow to implement the more balanced , evolutionary policies of a Harold Watkinson , for which it craves .
11 The principal importance of the decision , however , lies in the support that it affords to the proposition that it is not necessary for the duty of the policeman to be found in a specific rule of the common law or statute .
12 It was simply a happy coincidence that it sounded like an insult !
13 Ginguene 's most valuable next sentence suggests that the director 's baton had been waved all the time : it ‘ indicated by its strokes the end of each so-called bar and , by the various signs that it traced in the air , the various interpolations or divisions of that bar . ’
14 But Christianity had so forgotten an earlier period when it was open to discussion and even mockery of its views that it reacted to the modern onslaught with what often amounted to fear and paranoia .
15 Although both males call , they do so in such close unison that it sounds like a single call .
16 If that succeeds we really will be able to maintain the momentum of the fund and the work that it does throughout the world .
17 So effective was hegemony around the poor law that it continued throughout the preindustrial period and the period of rapid growth .
18 The gene itself benefits , in terms of its vertical transmission , from the average effects that it has on a whole series of bodies .
19 The phenotypic effects of a gene are normally seen as all the effects that it has on the body in which it sits .
20 But we shall now see that the phenotypic effects of a gene need to be thought of as all the effects that it has on the world .
21 Yet so strong was the belief in a static universe that it persisted into the early twentieth century .
22 The last folly was finished in nineteen thirty-six and provoked such a public outcry that it led to the first-ever planning inquiry .
23 The second , popularly believed to be more likely to succeed , challenges the constitutionality of the settlement on the basis that it went beyond the powers of the 1985 Act .
24 Frequently venue staff try to set everything up before you arrive , on the basis that it worked for the people before you and it 's less effort for them .
25 Public enterprise is part of the state ; its logic of action , and hence the functioning of its industrial relations , must be understood in terms of the place that it occupies within the state .
26 As The Lancet declaimed , the state interfered in the case of a diseased woman on the same grounds and by the same right that it interfered with the typhus fever or smallpox patient — to avert the spread of disease .
27 For in addition to the package that it negotiated with the delightful Mrs Morozova back in 1990 , came the equally delightful and extremely talented Miss Roubanova , the 13 year old daughter of Olga and her husband , Victor .
28 The exhibition 's logic is more artistic than art-historical and it is the insight that it provides into the majestic statement and the creative response which so engages the viewer 's attention .
29 Can I just put the point that it stands at the moment .
30 The cultural field expands thus to such a point that it bursts through the barriers that had previously contained it as only a de-limited field .
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