Example sentences of "the [noun] that [pron] [vb base] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Marchmont himself was forced to admit that ‘ Lord Anson 's promises are so long in the performing that I reckon none of us will build sudden expectations upon them ’ .
2 Chuck 's parents have some pride and care about the upbringing that they give their child(ren) showing that it is Bob 's character that it as fault and that his attitude can not be blamed on his economical situation .
3 An annuity is an arrangement with a financial institution whereby , if you are over retirement age and do not want to leave your property to anyone when you die , they will effectively buy your house from you ( albeit at a bit less than the market price ) , give you guaranteed security of tenure until you die , and turn the money that they pay you for the house into a regular income for life .
4 At times I become so obsessive about the dangers that I find myself making lists of what could go wrong .
5 so I started working through them , but without referring back to the notes that you know what some of them
6 You will see that we intend sending a leaflet to each member with the summer edition of Rural Wales , with the plea that they use it to recruit at least one new member .
7 Separately , calculate the hours that you think you will be allowed on taxation .
8 York 's a historic city of some hundred and four thousand people , covering some two thousand nine hundred hectares , but that city itself is only part of the settlement that I think we would all regard as as York itself , that covers a larger population of some a hundred and thirty five thousand people , er contained er within the York outer ring road , and referenced to the the map submitted with my H One submission , and also the greenbelt plan which we 've we 've just put up on the board there , er will show you the the broader extent of the urban area .
9 Eagan , Minnesota-based Cray Research Inc has introduced a new Y-MP M90 series of supercomputers , claiming that they offer the largest main memories ever , in the hope that they make it possible to solve important scientific and engineering problems that are too large for the memory of any existing computer system to handle efficiently .
10 Come that we might see you in the people of every race , and commit ourselves to the hope that we celebrate our life together in true community and justice .
11 They were so relieved at the college that they let him keep his job . ’
12 In order to fill this in , this little er section you have to look at the er the chapter that they recommend you , er Saint Matthew 's Gospel chapter twenty eight .
13 Because they , too , have a special relationship with a child 's mother — with its own areas of physical and emotional exclusivity — children have to give up the illusion that they own their mother , and so they must learn to share .
14 Despite Mrs Thatcher 's rhetoric , bribing people by way of tax allowances is the paternalistic state writ large ; taxpayers pick up considerable tax benefits on the condition that they spend their money in ways approved by the Government .
15 All this on the condition that you satisfy my curiosity later , of course . ’
16 They have taught us that man has meaning only on the condition that he view himself as meaningful .
17 Poverty is the recognition that we possess nothing to buy privilege with God , and prosperity results from our readiness to receive from God .
18 It 's on the way back when you face north across the loch that you know you will have to climb Beinn Alligin .
19 Retrenchment will be the order of the day , with the result that we achieve what we have planned for .
20 It says a great deal about our attitude to the role of the opposition that you regard everything that they do as being a little more than attempt to seek a political advantage .
21 The words of the songs , even given the fact that much is lost in translation , are disappointing ; such is the passion and power of the voices that you feel they must be singing about life and death matters .
22 " I expect they think at the Lab that I exploit you . "
23 For the vast majority of the work that we do there is very seldom any criticism , and in actual fact there is mostly a clamour for more activity and more and better work .
24 At which point you can complete any other bits of the work that you feel you need to .
25 But erm n n not , not the handicrafts that they teach them now at school .
26 It is sometimes said of bodies such as the CICB that they owe their existence to exercises of ‘ prerogative ’ power , but in this context , this means the same thing as saying that the body was not set up by statute .
27 well the thing is in the end for all the subsidiaries that you pass it counts on the
28 And I want you to think about the question that I ask you but I do n't want you to speak out the answers .
29 You then make the coin return by saying to the child that you think it is coming back in her ear .
30 He starts by remarking that scientists and ( at that time ; he was writing in the 1950s ) philosophers usually take science as the understanding of an independent reality , with the presumptions that they know what it is for something to be ‘ real ’ and for someone to ‘ understand ’ it .
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