Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [noun] be [adv] that " in BNC.

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1 She realizes that she is as yet too selfish to be truly creative and puts off her artistic endeavours for the time being so that she can first learn the more humble task of interpretation .
2 The second reason for the constancy is simply that the ocean is heated from above , by the Sun .
3 Thus nobody seems to notice that the oddest thing about the STV is precisely that it is a single vote — for that is what it is , no matter how many preferences are expressed .
4 The core of the problem is simply that the judiciary is the creature of the legal profession .
5 The idea of the tour is so that they can actually er listen to it , but they can turn it off whenever they want and they can use their guide book to see what is in each room and if you look at the guidebook as we go round , you will find that that the things are illustrated , you know the pot .
6 The implications of the title were simply that an organisation had extended its activities beyond exporting to consider markets distinct from its own domestic market .
7 It might be necessary to witness a rehearsal before an assessment of the overall impact of the play can be made , and if the purpose of the performance is so that it can be publicly reproduced on a different occasion , the circumstances in which that publication will take place will have a bearing on the offensive character of the artefact in question .
8 Part of the answer is simply that until very recently , most chimpanzee research was done on captive animals , who lead a very boring life , are often kept apart from other members of their family , and have a constant abundance of food .
9 The mark of the adjudicator is simply that he is called upon to decide what parties in dispute should have done or should do in the circumstances of a particular case .
10 For the drift of the argument was essentially that men did not assume leadership , but that it was granted to them according to criteria which took merit and experience , as well as birth and social standing , into consideration .
11 Conversely , Gloucester inherited the services of the Tunstalls of Thurland ( Lancs. ) from Warwick , although the first formal record of a fee is apparently that granted by Gloucester to Thomas Tunstall in autumn 1471 .
12 Conversely , Gloucester inherited the services of the Tunstalls of Thurland ( Lancs. ) from Warwick , although the first formal record of a fee is apparently that granted by Gloucester to Thomas Tunstall in autumn 1471 .
13 The calculation behind the memorial was naturally that most of the women would leave to get married within a few years .
14 In England for example , unemployment in the North is twice that in the South-East , and in most European countries there are lesser employment opportunities in rural areas as opposed to urban areas resulting in depopulation of the countryside and an increase in the size of cities .
15 The sentiment expressed in the phrase is simply that a strong EC should lay these foundations for the whole continent .
16 Liverpool 's main Euro trait down the years was always that the Reds did n't lose many goals in these type of games .
17 Its answer to the problem is either that it is entitled to more money from central Government , regardless of how much its rate support grant for the social services sector has risen , or that it needs the unfettered right to raise further taxes locally .
18 During this period , the most effective co-operation concerning the Kurds was probably that between their adversaries , in other words , the governments of Iraq and Turkey .
19 The legislation which has been repealed and re-enacted by the Bill is primarily that contained in the Foreign Tribunals Evidence Act , 1956 , and the Evidence by Commission Acts , 1859 and 1885 , as applied or extended by later enactments .
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