Example sentences of "[adv] those [noun pl] [vb base] " in BNC.

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1 So those mileages go up here .
2 So those animals do have a raw deal !
3 So those places have n't ?
4 It is the first time crews outside London have decided to cut themselves off from controllers and to accept only those calls put through by the police , the fire service , GPs , hospitals and the public .
5 They who make up the final verdict upon every book are not the partial and noisy readers of the hour when it appears Only those books come down which deserve to last .
6 ‘ If only those tests work out . ’
7 So how do all those animals live in the apparent absence of plants ?
8 It would be foolish to suggest that a river should never be tapped for energy or for agriculture , but the world 's politicians have not yet chosen to realize what enormous consequences such action has , or how long those consequences take to unfold , or — an essential consideration — that it is literally impossible to predict all that will ensue when a river is tapped .
9 Despite the requirement to open contracts and business opportunities to all comers , somehow those countries manage to choose their own nationals .
10 Gradient says it will go ahead with the Novell and Apple iterations whether or not those companies play .
11 This leads to what I have called the Central Theorem of the Extended Phenotype : An animal 's behaviour tends to maximise the survival of the genes ‘ for ’ that behaviour , whether or not those genes happen to be in the body of the particular animal performing it .
12 AND STILL those requests come pouring in !
13 AND STILL those requests come pouring in !
14 The more the institutions of representative government demand technical efficiency from administrative organizations , the more those organizations have found it necessary to employ specialists and the more difficult it has been for the judgements of the career officials to be resisted .
15 presumably those horses do n't do long spells of that sort
16 One might take the views of the promoters of a Bill as an indication of the intention of Parliament but any view the promoters may have about the questions which later come before the court will not often appear in Hansard and often those questions have never occurred to the promoters .
17 Now those plans have been thwarted .
18 Now those critics have been joined by what entrenched IRFU committeemen may regard as the Enemy Within .
19 And now those ruins tell me … how the life and the death of the peasants also remain forever the same , budding and withering regularly , like the grass and the flowers growing there in the graveyard . ’
20 Now those landowners have become greedy and demand high rents — and we help to exploit the peasants by levying crippling taxes .
21 ‘ Should even those ladies fail , rig up Ethel Merman via a central overhead speaker simultaneously and the bird sinks like even Granny 's rice pudding did n't .
22 Recently , even those outlets have been drying up because they too have been selling the big breweries ' beer in return for cheap loans .
23 Today those qualities have been , if anything , enhanced .
24 An official from the Inspectorate of Pollution had expressed worries that the scheme would cause more pollution but today those criticisms have been withdrawn .
25 Today those men run an army of hundreds of thousands — and , thanks to the way the Soviet Union 's forces were deployed against the West , the best tanks in its armoury .
26 Well those Toshibas go with a bit more of a swing , they were a blooming nuisance before .
27 I need to see how those steamers work , how well they work .
28 If the Commissioner is to be used as a model for other areas of dispute resolution , as will be suggested infra , it will be useful to consider how those problems have been tackled and whether they would pose significant difficulties in other areas .
29 This is quite different from the original control theory , which was concerned with the differences between individuals in their general dispositions towards offending ( based on the strength of their bonds to conformity ) and how those differences come about .
30 In Chapter 4 we considered the idea of systems theory , which enabled decision makers to take a holistic view of organisations and how those organisations relate to their environments .
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