Example sentences of "[coord] [vb base] that [indef pn] " in BNC.
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1 | you might also wish to pursue , or hope that someone else had pursued , the new Postgraduate Diploma in Intellectual Property Law and Practice . |
2 | That need not cause mass suicide among the contractors , or imply that none of these projects will be built . |
3 | So what happens when family members or friends are told or understand that someone close to them is going to die ? |
4 | Now at this st this stage usually the do-gooders who do n't know any better and put and insist that something should go in the mouth and it should n't , you never ever put anything in anybody 's mouth at all . |
5 | The Council guidelines on bioethics in health care cover considerations such as confidentiality and data protection and insist that no-one should be compelled to undergo testing for social benefits , employment or education . |
6 | Then her hands would grow hot and she would pause , wipe them with a moist cloth so that she should not smear the finespun white cotton thread as she worked , and her thoughts of Tommaso would return ; they were very sweet to her , often enough , though when her daydreaming grew extravagant she would fall again into hopelessness , and fear that none of it might ever come true . |
7 | If you have strong feelings about a situation declare an interest and suggest that someone else temporarily takes the chair . |
8 | In some ways it is better to communicate with the client and say that nothing has happened , than not to communicate with the client because nothing has happened . |
9 | Phil : Well I would say that if I had my life over again I wish and hope that everything happens the same , and I think at the end of the day Becky had been the cream on top of the cake … |
10 | It may be worth sending them your demos , as well as pictures and biographies , and hope that someone takes an interest in you . |
11 | I wanted to get on with the drop — the pilot had been in that freezing water for long enough ! i changed to a right-hand hold , then I talked to my passengers as much as possible to keep them calm and show that everything was under control . |
12 | The user should close down the LIFESPAN system if it is running and ensure that none of the other stand-alone LIFESPAN utilities are running . |
13 | And then , reassuring myself , I would gaze upon the white and gold protector , the messenger of the Almighty , and know that everything was in order . |
14 | But there was a feeling of peace and quiet in those old towns , a silence that was almost tangible , and it was impressive to stand alone beside the fast flowing river and know that one was surrounded by deep forest for hundreds of miles in all directions . |
15 | You will need to be extra considerate and remember that everyone finds their own way of living with HIV . |
16 | Jonadab had made it clear that he had done his son-in-law a favour in allowing him to jump the queue and buy four of his grey shirehorses and now Stephen had to screw up his courage and confess that one was dead . |
17 | Although major types of plant pest are surprisingly few , it is easy to become over-sensitive , not to say paranoid , and assume that everything that moves is a potential threat . |
18 | In Stag Line Ltd v Tyne Ship Repair Group Ltd ( The Zinnia ) [ 1984 ] 2 Lloyd 's Rep 211 , 222 Staughton J observed that he was tempted to hold that exclusion clauses in the contract before him were unreasonable because " first … they are in such small print that one can barely read them ; secondly , the draftsmanship is so convoluted and prolix that one almost needs an LLB to understand them " . |
19 | It is apparent that other factors may also be relevant : for instance , in Stag Line Ltd v Tyne Ship Repair Group Ltd ( The Zinnia ) [ 1984 ] 2 Lloyd 's Rep 211 Staughton J was inclined to hold the terms in a commercial contract unreasonable " first because they are in such small print that one can barely read them ; secondly , the draftsmanship is so convoluted and prolix that one almost needs an LLB to understand them " . |
20 | You move closer , and find that someone is at the bottom of a deep pit . |
21 | He said : ‘ In this country we tend to take our democratic rights for granted but this event gives Cleveland people a chance to make it clear they value those rights and believe that everyone in South Africa should have them too . ’ |
22 | Others believe that the killer was plain insane and feel that nothing more should be read into it . |
23 | You want to promote anticipatory grieving and emphasise that everybody is going to be affected . ’ |
24 | So either we shall have to disallow such a possibility and decree that nothing qualifies as a genuine proposition unless its truth-value is fixed for all time , i.e. that all propositions are what is sometimes called " eternal " propositions , or we shall have to accept that truth-value is not an integral part of the objective propositional content . |
25 | we shouldn we should n't get carried away , however , by this er focus on its managerial agencies , agency , and think that everything it does in this respect is conscious , because a lot of the processes that occur in the ego are actually not conscious . |
26 | Some philosophers know a lot about bells and think that everyone who hears ringing noises in their ears must have bats in the belfry . |
27 | ‘ You only have to look around , ’ he explained , ‘ and see that something has happened in the last twenty years . ’ |
28 | And see that no-one mentions Fleance — |
29 | She stabbed a book with a dangerous index finger , and took herself back to her desk , to survey her class and see that no-one had taken a whiff of pot while her attention had been distracted . |
30 | Go round each room during the night and check that everyone is all right . |