Example sentences of "and that [pron] [noun] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 And in 1944 when Cole wrote his book as part of the Movement 's centenary tribute to the Rochdale Pioneers , when Consumers ' Co-operation could still look back on many decades of unbroken success , it would have been as natural for him to suppose that the Pioneers had in this respect been mistaken and that their mistake stood in need of explanation .
2 It appears that the Nordischer Gesellschaft in Germany sent representatives to this country in 1935 to encourage such a grouping and that their spokesman referred in 1937 to the NL as being the English branch of international nazism .
3 Hunter realized both that ‘ secondary ’ sexual characters were functionally related to fighting or display and that their extent varied with ecology .
4 In our studies of the mucosa associated microflora of the rectum in ulcerative colitis we showed that E coli were isolated relatively infrequently during active disease and that their numbers increased with clinical improvement .
5 Ogden and Richards , in contrast , stress that words are used to ‘ point to ’ things , and that their meaning does in the last analysis depend on the things they are used to point to , their referents ; language may be different from reality , therefore , but it nonetheless reflects it .
6 But the committee warns that the industry 's long-term future is threatened by a squeeze in defence spending and reduced civilian orders , and that its survival depends upon increased spending on long-term research .
7 We can deduce that what an animal does depends on its state , and that its state depends on its past history of reinforcement and on its genetic propensities ( for example , its propensity to be reinforced by food ) .
8 ( a ) that the body complies with Rules 3–6 , 8 , 9 and 22 and that its members comply with Rules 5 and 6 ; and
9 ( a ) that the body complies with Rules 36 , 8 , 9 and 22 and that its members comply with Rules 5 and 6 ;
10 But we have also seen that he denies that such knowledge is innate and that its self-evidence arises from its being imprinted on our minds prior to all experience .
11 The judge , concluding that the court 's paramount consideration on such an application was the children 's welfare , in accordance with section 1(1) of the Act , and that its power to interfere with the local authority 's proposals for the children was not confined to exceptional circumstances , granted the foster mother leave to apply for residence orders in respect of the children .
12 To follow Cole that far would come perilously near to accepting that Co-operation was , as nearly as makes no difference , the Consumers ' Movement ; and that its future lay in further growth beyond that already achieved by 1939 until , so long as progress continued , it could within its chosen field have virtually displaced all competing provision and all competing manufacture for the purpose of provision .
13 It was as if she had accepted the fact that her mother had gone out of her life and that her future lay with this big fat woman , who alternately yelled and cajoled , and the nice man called Ben .
14 His only explanation is that possibly the gentleman had travelled on the line for many years in the past and that his ghost fitted into a well-worn slot in time .
15 Wilfrid 's biographer , some satisfaction to point out that Ecgfrith 's partnership with Wilfrid coincided with the king 's years of military success and that his failures followed from their differences .
16 Cronenberg himself has commented that The Fly and others of his films are about how viruses deform bodies , and that his originality lies in that he is ‘ on the side of the virus ’ .
17 He says he can remember he was burnt in the fire and that his sister died in the fire .
18 The pilot commented that prior to initiation of the final climb on an easterly heading he had not noticed any appreciable drift , and that his misjudgement resulted in deviation from the planned track .
19 Repeatedly he has said he favours internationally supervised elections , and that his country wishes to be non-aligned .
20 She could just see by the light of the wrought-iron lamps that he was wearing a shirt with frilled sleeves , and that his hair fell about his face .
21 But they quickly realised the judge had done them a great disservice and that his report hinged on a massive irony .
22 He looked powerful and tough , and yet Isabel found herself noticing that his lower lip was slightly fuller than the upper , and that his mouth quirked at one corner , hinting at a sense of humour .
23 It said that he had reneged on his monetarist beliefs ; that arrogance has been his undoing ; and that his policy lay in ruins .
24 By his recommendation he implies that a reasonable investigation has been made and that his recommendation rests on the conclusions based on that investigation .
25 I have learnt that the sun and the stars are eternally good , and that my body leaps in contact with this sparkling world and everything that it contains from the minds of Beethoven and Shakespeare to food and drink and a soft night 's sleep .
26 Remember that your back has to remain flat throughout and that your head has to be up .
27 ‘ It makes you understand that you are inextricably bound up with each other and that your fortunes depend on one another .
28 It makes you understand that you are inextricably bound up with each other and that your fortunes depend on one another .
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