Example sentences of "that [pron] [modal v] [adv] [vb infin] a " in BNC.

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31 information about a particular piece , so , Simon and I sort of , we were talking kind of fairly casually about that , but erm , what we agreed to do is , this was about the time when we first got the equipment I think and it , it occurred to me that you , and I 've checked this now , that you can actually plug a cassette , you know , a Walkman type of player into either the microphone for the
32 Remember that you can always select a word by double clicking and a paragraph by clicking three times but did you know that you can extend these further ?
33 The great thing about tea drinking is that so many varieties are available that you can always find a brew that is appropriate to the occasion .
34 This must be the ultimate beach resort in all of Greece — five miles of sand stretching away into the distance in either direction — more than enough for even the most demanding beach baby and relaxed enough so that you can always find a place to sunbathe however you want to .
35 Remember that you can still win a fabulous prize for the most sponsorship money collected per team and per person — so collect your money and send it in !
36 He understood that you can never change a singer 's personality to fit a role .
37 Note , however , that you can only add a maximum of 10 modules to any one SPR .
38 Note , however , that you can only add a maximum of 10 modules to any one SPR .
39 I think it 's logic that if you work hard , there 's a very good chance that you will also achieve a lot in your particular career . ’
40 The arguments listed under ‘ Dynamic aspects ’ indicate how having a favourable position in the current income or wealth distribution makes it likely that you will also have a favourable position in a future income or wealth distribution ( inter- and intra-generationally ) .
41 But I was going to say that you will never find a purer woman than Mercy Chant .
42 We want you to know that you will always get a fair deal when you book with us .
43 So large was the first general edition of 1935 that you should easily find a copy for not more than £10 .
44 She had some idea that you should never wake a sleep-walker .
45 Erm it suggests that you should never appoint a solicitor or a bank for the reasons of cost .
46 The BSIA stresses that you should never buy a system from someone who casually turns up on your doorstep .
47 Early in my journalistic career I learned that one should never use a preposition to end a sentence with — remembering it because it committed the error it condemned ; whatever the consequence , I was now fully convinced that Moose Jaw was not a bad place to be from .
48 There were fruit trees amongst the flowers , here a pear tree , there a currant bush , so that one could either smell a rose , crush a verbena , or eat a fruit ; there were borders of box , but also of sorrel and chibol ; and the stiff battalion of leeks , shallots , and garlic , the delicate pale-green foliage of the carrot , the aggressive steel-grey leaves of the artichokes , the rows of lettuce which always ran to seed too quickly .
49 This does not however mean that one can clearly distinguish a concept of ‘ rule of law ’ in the legal system from ‘ rule of law ’ as part of the ideological system .
50 Notable among these is the fact that the mismatch of range is even greater than in the case of the prenominal adjectives ; it is true that one can usually expand a postnominal adjective to a relative clause containing be , though we should certainly note cases like : ( 31 ) he is dreaming of the whisky which will be galore with her arms which were akimbo she stared at Victor food which is aplenty is on sale in the end tent however , there is not the slightest difficulty about producing numerous examples where the relative clause with be is fully satisfactory but can not be reduced to a grammatical postnominal adjective .
51 Nothing wrong with that , of course , but let's not pretend that one can really make a decent living just by turning wood .
52 It is thus from the 1920s that one can realistically chart a conflict in the Conservative party between a libertarian-individualist tendency and a paternalist-collectivist tendency .
53 Thus the bits will fit together after fracture so that one can often glue a broken vase together quite plausibly .
54 In an eminently Benjaminian vein , Kienholz has said that one can only understand a ‘ society by going through its junk stores and flea markets ’ .
55 Finally we observe that unc and so , if we replace the unc sign by + , if we simply drop the unc sign and if we then agree to write unc we establish a notational way of writing polynomials that we might just find a little easier to work with !
56 Erm , when I drew attention to this , one of the first things I did when I got elected to this council , erm , we get papers back which seem to suggest that in fact the Home Office are funding it at a level which , dare I say suggests that we might even make a small profit , er and I have in fact recently been approached by colleagues from Gloucestershire , asking us how we manage in that er , er exercise , because they 're concerned about the high cost of er , protection for certain royal establishments in their county .
57 How distressed and worried is industry in those regions that we might mistakenly have a Labour Government , which would do so much damage to inward investment ?
58 I was going to say , when it comes to paragraph five , do you erm suggest that you actually think in terms of church organisations , they 're not mentioned , and I look forward in in paragraph seven one to the seminar , the working seminar that 's going to be in the near future , and I hope that we 'll soon get a date , so that we can get it in our very busy diaries , in the hope that we can come along and learn more about this .
59 But we do take some of them on for work experience — we have to remember that we 'll always need a pool of new photographers to choose from . ’
60 I feel that in some senses it becomes almost about a certain strain of purity — that we would rather have a demonstration of 50 people on maybe a fuller , total political programme , than we would a demonstration of 50,000 people on maybe more limited aims but nevertheless political aims that we do feel carry us forward , but which could draw into activity a broader range of people .
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