Example sentences of "[be] [adv] that the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The nature garden has given everyone a lift and will be somewhere that the children can enjoy . ’
2 She explained to Deborah James , chosen from 300 applicants , how she wanted ‘ the design system to be as perfect as it could be so that the accountants could not spoil it ’ — ‘ accountants ’ having now become for Laura a generic term for anyone not on the design team .
3 The difficulty arises partly in differentiating between what the user needs to know about the workings of the system , i.e. , how transparent the system should be so that the task can be performed effectively and efficiently .
4 Let the prototype low-pass transfer function be so that the planned high-pass transfer function is where a and b are certain constants , for example for the Butterworth type , and ( see equation ( 12.11 ) ) .
5 In political terms , the worry in carrying out free market reform may be less that the reform fails than that it might succeed .
6 His reply would be perhaps that the proof of the pudding is in the particular cases .
7 It would not be enough that the actor merely intends to have himself arrested , for example by way of protest .
8 That seems unusual , but it may be just that the home warren attracted more elil than other places .
9 The scientists who man the climatological observation posts are less cautious than they used to be now that the general theory of climate change has become common property ; government servants are more confident and outspoken ; and , while scepticism remains , no cabinet minister is likely to denounce the theory and the accompanying evidence as hysterical .
10 She sipped absently , so desperate to remember who she was and how she came to be here that the mug was empty before she realised it .
11 In the case of respondents whose arguments will be simply that the judgment of the court below is correct for the reasons given , counsel for the respondent can send in a letter to that effect in lieu of a skeleton argument .
12 This may be entirely proper for the evolution of knowledge in a particular field ; or it may be simply that the researcher has developed a tunnel vision , and is unable to see beyond a very narrow focus .
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