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

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1 It is doubtful that the 1703 visitors were looking at ‘ pickle ’ since the anthropoid shell fits so tightly that no additional liquid could have been introduced .
2 If the trial goes so badly that the plaintiff wants to take the money out during it he must , as was decided in Gaskins v British Aluminium Co Ltd [ 1976 ] QB 524 , make an application to do so , and he must have the defendant 's consent even to make the application .
3 The current project will extend previous work by presenting the homograph primes so briefly that the subjects are not consciously aware of them .
4 It seems to me that the New Testament says very clearly that many people came to Jesus asking for a sign and he pointed to himself .
5 Research shows very clearly that people recognize when they are being spoken down to , and they resent it .
6 Research shows quite clearly that although the two names may occasionally have been confused due to scribal error , mishearing by early recorders , or poor scholarship , they are quite distinct and separate in origin and have remained separate in use by the families bearing them .
7 The dictionary states quite clearly that it comes from the United States .
8 I had a similar experience in the vestibule of the BBC with an interviewee from the Festival of Light who was declaiming the sins of magazines with open-crotch poses so loudly that I had to pretend I was n't with him .
9 A widely used textbook by Asa Hilliard claims not only that Africa is ‘ the mother of western civilisation ’ but also that Africans discovered America centuries before Columbus .
10 Mr Gorbachev knows full well that , unlike his counterparts in Poland and Hungary , Mr Honecker can not replace doctrinaire communism with appeals to nationalism .
11 When the green light comes on again that means it 's done does n't it ?
12 However , Antony knows full well that this will be of great interest to the common people .
13 But though others may have been fundamentally changed by such sudden acclaim , little Loris knows full well that the challenge of the 1991 season is a much tougher one .
14 By the Franck-Condon Principle , ionization occurs so fast that the internuclear distance does not have time to change ; the ion is produced with the internuclear distance that was appropriate for the molecule , in what is called a ‘ vertical ’ transition .
15 The use of particular terms in thesis titles proclaims not just that the author is a member of a particular sub-discipline group , but that he or she is a member at a particular time , characterised by terms rooted in the paradigms then current ( Dott ) .
16 Bernard Fall says very precisely that he was held from 28 August 1942 to 16 September 1943 .
17 This ambiguity does not greatly alter our conclusions regarding airburst altitude : once an object has spread to , say , twice its initial radius , its further spreading happens so quickly that an ‘ explosion altitude ’ is defined to within a few kilometres , regardless of whether the explosion is taken to occur then or when the object has spread to 5–10 times its initial radius .
18 A comparison of the three Gospels shows not only that they have a great deal in common but also that , in many cases , the wording of individual stories is either identical or very similar ( for example , compare Mark 2:3–12 ; Matt.
19 I uphold the law of this realm — and the law states quite clearly that vagrants are rogues and vagabonds .
20 First , just two appear at the front end as distinct blocks of tissue and then , about each hour , another pair are added behind them and a wave of formation proceeds backwards so that at the end of a few days there are 46 somites .
21 Ambiguity of this kind and degree demonstrates very forcibly that words are not determined on a one-to-one basis by the idea or thing which they supposedly represent .
22 And there 's the nub of it : Guy Chadwick knows full well that , for good or bad , he 's got to call the shots in The House Of Love .
23 The Office Angels case shows once again that your chances of doing so with success are minimal , which means :
24 The first author shows quite clearly that the idea of inference or mental perception is connected to an impression of " afterness " or subsequence , as are all the other uses with to which we have seen up to this point .
25 This conclusion underlines yet again that there are wicked people , whereas a more structural analysis of this would perhaps see the behaviour as a logical extension of the search for profits .
26 The roof , which is stripped of tiles , provides the water-supply ; the chimney smokes so thickly that the opposite wall is barely visible ; the few remaining window-panes are stained and the majority are stuffed with rags and paper .
27 As we saw in the last chapter , Hooke 's law is really only true for small strains and at large strains the interatomic force curve bends over so that the strain energy is less than we have calculated , very roughly about half .
28 Where the damage is insidious and not discovered until later , eg industrial diseases , the provisions of s14 of the Limitation Act 1980 which define " knowledge " may delay the running of limitation even further , until the plaintiff knows not only that he is ill but also the likely cause .
29 However , the development of better approaches to assessment requires not only that managers facilitate such development but also that practitioners are prepared for the need to apply new skills and face new dilemmas .
30 If it does not — and Mrs. Murray states quite clearly that it does not — then I would regard the Home Secretary as having acted contrary to his policy .
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