Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb -s] [adv] that " in BNC.

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1 In Roffey it was held that a procession was an ‘ assembly ’ for the purposes of the Air Navigation Order 1954 , and the commentary on that case points out that a procession was regarded as an assembly for the purposes of the old offence of unlawful assembly .
2 As proof of his point , Aston Martin 's chairman points out that one of his 155mph product 's soundest markets was Hong Kong , an island so small , says Gauntlett , that the only things moving at more that half that speed ‘ were taking off from Kai Tak airport ’ .
3 The Cloud-author points out that they can not be pursued simultaneously .
4 Marcuse points out that :
5 In its defence the computer points out that the problem lies not in its answer but in the question it was asked in the first place .
6 The response points out that there is little point in improving regional road links if traffic can not move at the beginning or end of its journey — inevitably this must involve a public transport solution within urban areas , with some form of limitation on car usage .
7 Some manufacturers are removing the sugar and alcohol from their products and alcohol-free gripe water is a safer choice , although the HVA points out that there 's no hard scientific evidence that gripe water actually works in any case , whatever it may contain .
8 The trial was streamlined : Mr Dixon 's own lawyer points out that in a $1.3 billion S$L failure , the government came up with charges involving only $600,000 .
9 The drug industry points out that either course could harm more people than it helps , particularly if thousands are benefiting from the treatment .
10 But the association points out that the government already spends £12 300 on each job it creates through its regional incentive scheme .
11 However , the Freight Transport Association points out that Vehicle Excise Duty for a 38 tonne lorry in France is £690 a year compared to £3,100 in this country .
12 Kley points out that conservative accounting represented an added charge of more than Dm400 million to the 1990 figures .
13 Delphy points out that if one jettisoned the idea of the family as unit of stratification , using economic criteria to classify individuals instead , most wives would come out below their husbands .
14 As for energy saving , the study points out that the oil shocks of 1973 and 1979 cut consumption by only 12 per cent .
15 Ninagawa points out that his style , combining East and West , ritual and freedom , in many ways mirrors life in Japan : ‘ I get up and listen to Bach on my compact disc and have Japanese rice for breakfast . ’
16 Nigel Haigh of the IEEP points out that in 1979 the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution reported that evidence for the other major health worry — the potential for nitrite , which is formed from nitrate in certain conditions , to create ‘ nitrosamines ’ and cause stomach cancer — was only ‘ weak and equivocal ’ .
17 He says transport is very very cheap for firms and it 's been made cheaper by successive governments building more roads to help freight and also by raising the weight limits so that we 've got bigger and bigger lorries .
18 The outlawing of Earl Thorkell of East Anglia on 11 November is his sole recorded action in 1021 , and in 1022 the Chronicle says simply that he sailed out with his ships to Wiht ( D reads Wihtland ) .
19 Bosworth-Toller 's Dictionary says cautiously that often you can not tell ‘ whether the word is used with a good or with a bad meaning ’ .
20 The only manuscript of the latter author available for this present study says simply that Molla Fenari went on the pilgrimage by way of Damascus in 833 and mentions neither his return nor his death .
21 When Beowulf walks into Hrothgar 's hall the poet says appreciatively that ‘ on him his armour shone , the cunning net ( searo-net ) sewed by the crafts ( orþancum ) of the smith ’ .
22 However , the hover fly and poached egg association shows clearly that this is a direction in which a great deal of research needs to be done .
23 Payments given to employees who have to replace children 's school uniforms or pay subsistence costs so that children can continue their education in the old location are usually listed separately from disturbance allowances in company relocation policies .
24 Briefly , the organisation British Actors ' Equity exists so that only bona fide members of the profession may apply for work : and those members must abide by the contractual rulings established by the Union in negotiation with managements in theatre , television and film .
25 That chapter notes briefly that he and Jacob agreed to part because the land would not support all their flocks and herds and allow them to live together .
26 It is worrying that after all this time Labour appears to think that being in opposition means solely that one must oppose everything .
27 You want your body to get about as easily as possible and be able to do the things that your mind seizes on that you want to , to have a go at and to make a reasonable job of it .
28 But of course it is sometimes not possible , because historical research demonstrates conclusively that the kind of standardised written language which can be used to represent ethnicity or nationality is a rather late historic construction — mostly of the 19th century or even later — and in any case quite often it does not exist at all , as between Serbs and Croats .
29 Quoting from a conference held at Aberdeen in 1973 , the plan points out that community facilities and housing are likely to be the subject of much inter-community wrangling .
30 ‘ The national campaign points out that over the past year as more and more hospitals have opted out of health authority control a two-tier system in health care has developed .
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