Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] [det] that [verb] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | And this is just a continuation of that that prejudice against those that appear to be living off the state and not justifying their existence and I think it does n't deserve the time that we 've spent on it tonight . |
2 | James Callaghan , the chancellor of the exchequer , was pleased by the American interest in the smoothest possible transition from Conservative to Labour in all that related to sterling . |
3 | It 's hardly ever reported in the Third World and er taking the facts that we 've just been talking about into account , it would be tempting to see anorexia as related to conflicts about the beginning of a young woman 's reproductive life because what normally happens is , and has certainly happened in the only case of this that occurred in my family , the young woman in question lost so much weight that she stopped cycling and in fact erm puberty changes went into reverse , she actually regressed , she started puberty and er she had this anorexia problem and she stopped cycling and , and all her body changes reversed , she went back to pre-puberty again erm because of oh no , oh no it did n't , she lost her body hair and stuff yeah , er her , her , her hormonal changes . |
4 | Yet in the outcome the Criminal Justice Act 1967 , with over 300 amendments to the original Bill having been debated for more than sixty hours in the Commons Standing Committee , suffered the fate of those that went before and came after . |
5 | The in vivo action of TAGH seems to entail recruitment of similar changes in the EGF receptor to those that occur after partial hepatectomy . |
6 | The Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons ' Act 1970 provided the basis for much that comes under the heading of community care . |
7 | Maybe it was n't the body after all that led to Mellor 's downfall . |
8 | There was criticism of much that passed for training . |
9 | What had been a right to receive benefit was replaced by grudingly distributed charity with all that implied in the era before the abolition of the workhouse . |
10 | Output is thus affected by the deviation of the price level from both that expected by workers in period t - 1 and in period t - 2 . |
11 | There was no one to see in him either dismay or glee , or the furious fusion of both that raged in him . |
12 | It would tax packaging materials , increase duties on petrol and diesel , and introduce a luxury rate of value-added tax ( VAT ) on goods and services that damage the environment , with a zero rate on those that contribute to sustainable development . |
13 | The degree and meaning of prostitution was an important issue in itself ( one estimate would have made prostitution the fourth largest female occupation ) but more important , given the double standard , was the reservoir of venereal disease especially syphilis , that it was perceived as constituting , a threat particularly to the efficiency of the armed services , and it was concern over this that led to the passing of the Contagious Diseases Acts ( in 1864 , 1866 , 1869 ) . |
14 | She felt she 'd lived a zillion eternities , crossed endless lifeless galaxies , bearing her solitude , waiting for US , waiting for the fulfilment of all that lay between them . |
15 | It was as though he could not be convinced ; as though he could hardly accept the fact that his father was no longer there , the final arbiter of all that happened in the business and in their domestic lives . |
16 | Labour 's 1983 election manifesto pledged the party to ‘ take action to abolish the undemocratic House of Lords as quickly as possible and , as an interim measure , introduce a bill in the first session of Parliament to remove its legislative powers — with the exception of those that relate to the life of a parliament ’ . |
17 | The priest could n't have looked more relieved if he had completed a mission to those that dwell in the waters that are below the earth . |
18 | Or ill , depending on your view of all that happened in consequence . |
19 | The great 16th century Venetian architect San Savino said that ‘ a city should be built to the convenience and satisfaction of those that live in it , and to the great surprise of strangers ’ . |
20 | and coming up with a travesty like this that masquerades as a motion to the Council . |