Example sentences of "[noun] that [pers pn] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It was such a childish action that they all laughed again before he said , while striking a pose , ‘ You have a lot to learn Mr Farrier . ’
2 Likewise , if it is tin that you hanker for , Jones is in charge of 150000 tonnes of the material that his political masters have decided they no longer need .
3 Coming to terms with the fear that we all feel when in danger is different from being fearless .
4 The grave social and political crises that they all face will prove a severe test for their new , untried assemblies .
5 It should be clear from the last chapter that they both play a role in determining the equilibrium level of income and employment and that a change in any one of them will cause the level of national income to change via the multiplier effect .
6 know all the words that they all make sense to you picnic yes
7 Having already made substantial structural changes to his garage to make room for the aeroplane 's assembly , and storage when complete , he spent the first days after its arrival using some of the surplus lumber from its packing crate to build a workbench , only to discover on completion that it all had to come apart again to extract the stepladder he 'd used to support it during assembly .
8 Although most DNA is in the B form , whose structure was originally determined by Watson and Crick , there is no reason why the cell should not make use of other forms as well , and indeed Alex Rich ( MIT ) described a protein binding with high affinity to the left-handed helix of Z-DNA that he first described .
9 It had been from their lips that I first heard uttered the expression avare comme un juif , followed by a vicious attack on the only Jewish family in their village to have survived the war and returned to claim their old house .
10 Accordingly we tend to be friendly with one another , there being a general recognition that we all benefit rather from mutual support than ferocious competition .
11 On condition that we both covered our heads , Olivia and I were invited to watch the proceedings from the rear of the crowd .
12 This implies the rather restricting condition that they all have the same activation energy and there are doubts upon this point being raised in recent research .
13 Get your financé involved too , so that you can begin to build a picture of the colours and designs that you both like or more importantly hate !
14 Ordinary life was halted to allow time for realization of the sorrow to penetrate the layers of defence that we all set up to blunt the terrible pain of loss .
15 But it is such a famous story that we all mistake it for our own . ’
16 We also have the advantage that we all know each other well and have adjusted to each other 's life-styles .
17 One way in which they cooperate is to make proposals that they both know the other side will not accept .
18 Also missing from the personal computer users vocabulary were such words as laser printer , PostScript , page description language and a whole range of typographic terminology that we all now take for granted .
19 It was the next afternoon that I first saw her , she was in an incubator .
20 It was during my first year at university that I first came across it in a book by James Tyler Kent in a public library .
21 It was at university that he first began to perform , and he later went to New York to study acting with Lee Strasberg .
22 We now have one of those very clear , but actually rather rare , tests of a scientific hypothesis that we all learned about at school .
23 yeah , a decision that we all erm just think what we generally use through the day .
24 Other classes struggle all the time , to get anything done you feel you know why are we having this class , we 're not making erm it 's not making a lot of educational sense and one comes to the conclusion after many years of bitter experience that it personal dynamics , it depends on who 's in the group and some groups erm this one successful and some groups which I wo n't mention are relatively unsuccessful and one feels okay that 's because of the inter-personal , it 's who 's in the group and how they interact with each other and try as one might , I suppose I play th the leading role in this group
25 De Quincey wrote that habitual opium-taking reawakened the childhood capacity that we all recognize and remember , for conjuring up monsters in the dark .
26 In fact the dream that we all had about Great Britain acknowledging it 's theatre and funding it properly has suffered a lot of setbacks since the ‘ sixties ’ .
27 Do you think as a band you have a basic outlook that you all agree on ?
28 You will appreciate that as Chairman I have not given up the fight to get as much financial aid and help as is possible to keep our heads above water ; we must fight to keep all that we hold dear and promote the Medau that we all benefit from both in health and fitness , and as teachers , financially .
29 Plants consume carbon dioxide , releasing the oxygen that we other species require , completing in our turn the full circle by ‘ burning ’ carbon and breathing out carbon dioxide .
30 It was at TMcL that he first met his one and only ‘ accountancy ’ hero , James Dowling , the then senior partner — ‘ one of the finest men I have ever met and arguably the best accountant Scotland has ever seen ’ .
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