Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] that [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 The programme will have succeeded if , in 15 years ' time , primary health care in the capital has lost its status as the national laggard ; the quality of the services it offers matches or exceeds that enjoyed in the rest of England ; and London has become a place where aspiring primary health care practitioners in all disciplines aim to work .
2 It did n't sink darling it floated on the top , so we really need that one in there but I tell you what we 'll do , because you 've tr , written it so nicely we 'll put a little arrow and we 'll put there , that means that goes in there , alright , that 's smashing now all you need to do now is write your name on it
3 This was the first time we had returned to Eggleston Burn since a summer visit in search of the Grass of Parnassus and butterwort that grow in its boggy flushes .
4 Sam was gratified to be alone with his father and identified only the improvization and daring that lay in the situation , not the guilt and apprehension .
5 In addition , they said they appreciated the sense of acceptance , trust and understanding that emerged in the group .
6 Is it adequate at all to try in this fashion to interpret religion as a means to an end , and to define that end in progressive humanistic terms as having to do with the elevation and betterment of human society ?
7 And let that sit in the shoe box and then tape the shoe box .
8 The " healing " is therefore done between sufferers rather than from staff to patients and is the equivalent of the group insight and support that comes in the Anonymous Fellowships .
9 Pupils are capable of articulating a need for information and expressing that need in terms of curriculum-based concepts and keywords .
10 However , others have been content to accept the message in Problems of Social Policy : for example , Peter Gosden , in his detailed study of education in the war , cites Titmuss as the authoritative source on the social consequences of evacuation ; likewise , Raynes Minns concludes that the revelations of the children 's condition ‘ made headlines , and once again , as in 1914 , when the physical condition of army recruits was found to be so poor , war forced a British government to recognise the extremes of poverty and neglect that survived in our cities , and eventually to act by expanding our welfare services ’ .
11 A few things remained in the bureau drawer ; the odds and ends that accumulate in drawers : an engagement diary for 1981 which had only a few entries ; an old wallet , empty except for an out-of-date RAC membership card .
12 The fabrication of an African persona is reflexive ; an extraordinary meditation on the self ; a powerful exploration of the fears and desires that reside in the writerly conscious .
13 It is characteristic of frogs and toads that live in more stable or predictable environments .
14 In this they might have taken heed of the Reich 's experience , but instead they went ahead and repeated that experience in miniature .
15 Since 1953 , when Watson and Crick had solved the structure of DNA and recognized that embedded in its famous double helix lay a mechanism both for genetic transmission of information and the directed synthesis of proteins , the detailed mechanisms of protein and nucleic acid synthesis had been unravelled and more and more aspects of its exquisitely precise cellular controls were becoming clear .
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