Example sentences of "[adv] that [adv] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 When she had finished , he suggested gently that perhaps he might meet Grégoire .
2 He felt illogically that somehow he was responsible for introducing a dissonant element into the Club .
3 Fox closed her shields down , tighter and harder than ever before , so that even her timesense was cut off , but still , now that Mouse had betrayed it , still she could feel the shimmery fragile links running between her and this stupid lackwit empath , this mutant mongrel animal —
4 So much so that even her ‘ father ’ would have had difficulty telling her from the real thing .
5 I am not referring to the victims , of course , who do n't know me and who , for all practical purposes , are n't human but come in sections of interest , so that even their smiles and yawns and frowns come in sections .
6 People doing certain jobs have characterised themselves — and been characterised — as professions : this concept with all its ideological trappings has been incorporated into sociological analysis so that even its harshest critics are incapable of transcending it , and conduct their discourse in its terms .
7 A counter-balance for Satan can not be found for Milton has gone too far in his wonderful description and characterisation so that even his portrayal of God can not even hope to rise to the same level .
8 The girl had something — quite apart from her natural grace and outstanding good looks , quite apart from the lithe , leggy body that was simply made for modelling , there was a quality about her that made her stand out from all the others girls in the class , which drew the eye and held it , so that even someone as cynical as Arlene looked and wanted to go on looking .
9 Few people are happy about the idea of an animal having to die so that either they or their pet can feed , and might well be prepared to eat a synthetic steak if one could be produced — and to serve it up to their cat .
10 He kept two bags always packed , one for hot climes and one for cold , so that immediately he heard of an eruption he could board the next available ship .
11 It is an illustration of the way in which ‘ The Thing ’ works by substituting nonsense for sense , so that presently everybody is talking nonsense , and nobody can talk sense any more .
12 The case in which A is non-defective has already been treated in 1.19 , so that here we must consider the defective case .
13 So that why it 's possessive .
14 Around 70% of the area 's population and business are linked to digital exchanges and BT is already considering upgrading the remainder so that soon anyone in the Highlands can be ISDN-linked .
15 They 'll then pass the information on so that eventually everyone in the road knows .
16 So that eventually we 'll find a mutually agreeable time .
17 By swinging his legs he was at last able to make painful progress , so that eventually he was half in and half out of the building .
18 This was geared to helping him to behave likewise with a failing pupil , so that both he and the child had less need to make others feel useless .
19 Keep the rudder where it is and allow the speed to increase a few knots so that both you and the student can observe the exact position of the rudder pedals .
20 We do the same for the submatrix bordered by the first row and column , and so on , so that finally we reach the unit matrix as the canonical form for A. It is to be observed that , since in using elementary operations I ( i , j ) , I(k) , I(l) on A we are effectively at each stage multiplying together determinants neither of which vanishes , the reduction of A to I must be possible when A is on-singular .
21 Then f may now be written as the quadratic form of which the matrix is the leading minor of A of order b — 1 , and we may deduce , corresponding to ( 22 ) , unc Now , by putting unc we establish a similar result for unc and so on , so that finally we establish that unc From ( 21 ) it is clear that a necessary and sufficient condition that f shall be positive is that Di shall be positive , all i .
22 Then he would make a pair of horns with his hands and step slowly backwards , and the closer he got to the bedside lamp the bigger the shadow grew , so that finally it outgrew the wall and spread across the ceiling and towered above him , a vast and terrible Demon .
23 She had decided , in fact , to return the outfit , and Faye 's mentioning it like this forced the issue so that finally she found the courage to speak .
24 So many refugees had passed that way already , and the steamers were dirty with no accommodation , so that again we slept side by side on the decks , and ate cold and rather horrible curry and rice on filthy plates .
25 The shadows had lengthened , he thought , so that probably he had been right and it was towards evening .
26 If we anticipate reversing the fact that much of our population holidays abroad , so that instead we have more people from overseas holidaying with us , a straightforward reversal of where the money is spent would beneficially affect the foreign exchange by £1,600 million .
27 Tragically , as our old people disappear from our midst so that increasingly we do not notice them , the old adage ‘ out of sight out of mind ’ comes into its own .
28 The convention of the Handelian opera seria has corroded so that today we find it frigid entertainment , but was it ever a satisfactory dramatic form , with its succession of da capo arias , its wastelands of recitative , and its statuesque indifference to tension , beyond conspiracy and complication ?
29 He had told her , so that today he could be free — free to go to Charity and tell her about this astonishing feeling inside of him .
30 I hope you will be particularly strong today so that tomorrow you can achieve the best possible results .
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