Example sentences of "[that] the [noun sg] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Both young men then glanced at each other , clamming up in some embarrassment as they recalled that the fortune they were at this moment vying for had been lost by Benedict Beckenham , for the story of the will was naturally common knowledge among his intimates .
2 The report " positively determined " that the crash which killed all 259 people on board Pan Am flight PA103 ( and 11 local residents in the Scottish town of Lockerbie ) , had resulted from an explosion within a luggage container triggered by a device fitted to a radio-cassette player .
3 Their central point , though , is that the authoritarianism which Hall identifies stems almost wholly from attempts to manage a political and economic system in crisis .
4 By telling his or her own story of drinking and its consequences , the recovering alcoholic is often able to get through the Protective denial system of the sufferer so that the sufferer himself or herself , through personal identification with many elements of that story and with the associated feelings , is gradually able to make his or her own diagnosis .
5 His hand was shaking so much that the bottle he was holding rattled against his glass like a window in a thunderstorm .
6 It is vicious because , as I have just argued , the external relation that constitutes the meaning of the mental content is not something that the subject himself can apprehend : it can only be constructed from a third-person perspective .
7 The movie is ambitious in its mix of fantasy and realism , and there 's a sustained central performance from Iain Glen , but the big problem is that the subject himself is not fascinating in the way the Krays were .
8 But I will tell you that the subject we call Art on the time-table is badly named .
9 I now turn to the submission of Woolwich that your Lordships ' House should , despite the authorities to which I have referred , reformulate the law so as to establish that the subject who makes a payment in response to an unlawful demand of tax acquires forthwith a prima facie right in restitution to the repayment of the money .
10 The notion that the price they have paid for their popularity is to live their lives under an insufferable glare of publicity is one of the great fictions of the middle class .
11 Thus in Padfield v. Minister of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food milk producers from the south east asked the minister to appoint a committee of investigation , alleging that the price they were paid by the Milk Marketing Board was too low having regard to transport costs .
12 Publishing the prices once the sales are completed also raises problems of commercial confidentiality because the companies involved may be concerned that the price they paid for a business should not be revealed to their competitors .
13 Management may argue that , with less warranty and other protection , they should pay less than an " arm's-length " purchaser , and that the price they pay does not involve any element of benefit chargeable to income tax under Schedule E ( see below , 4.3 ) .
14 Take the case of the inhabitants of an island who mistakenly think that the price which the rest of the economy is prepared to pay for its output has risen .
15 So that the price we want to end up with on the books is is
16 Furthermore , Ford 's new Price Protection plan means that the price you pay is the same as the price on your order , as long as you are prepared to accept delivery within three months and , in any event , as soon as your car is available .
17 Bearing this in mind ( and the same applies to the unregistered design right generally and to copyright works ) it is worthwhile keeping good records of the development of the topography so that the date it was created can be proved in a court of law .
18 Er there 's with no evidence of an oversupply , my suggestion is that the decision you must be taking is to what degree do you assume er to what degree do you er recommend a reduction in migration rates .
19 ‘ And I want you to know that the decision I have made has been mine and mine alone .
20 The attempt to disguise the fact that the decision itself was not made in or by the Cortes , was taken a step further with the announcement that the Law of Succession would be submitted to popular consideration in a national referendum on 6 July 1947 .
21 Nourse J ( as he then was ) took the view that the decision itself had to provide evidence of error , without assistance from cross-examination , and that in this case there was sufficient evidence .
22 And then she read , in a copy of The Stage that happened to be turned in her direction , a paragraph about him which made it clear that the wife whom he was talking about in this present tense had died a year ago , and that he had had a row of flops in London .
23 It is significant that the union which represents the employed workers of Cartón has never been on strike .
24 The separate culture was most clearly developed in the Dukeries ; it was there that the Conservative party and the NCB rested their hopes of defeating the NUM and that the union itself invested so much energy in picketing to try and close the crucial pits .
25 But there was no suggestion that the union itself might be disbanded .
26 His solution was that the Chivalry of the Sea demanded that the union itself would take responsibility .
27 At the time he had assumed that she had simply contacted the address on some pretext and discovered that he had n't been there , but it was only later , when the argument had blown over , that he remembered that the address he had given his mother had been vacant .
28 The rationale for this is that the generation which uses the asset should pay for it .
29 It is ironic , I think , that the release which out of the compassion of our hearts we give to old , sick animals , we deny to old , sick human beings .
30 Mr. Munby , in his admirable skeleton argument , has suggested that the approach which best accords with principle may be summarised as follows :
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