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

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1 The castor or wart that grows on the inside of a horse 's foreleg was also used as the basis for a drawing powder :
2 Any liability , injury , loss or damage that occurs outside the territorial limits of the policy unless you have paid an extra premium to have insurance cover outside the territorial limits .
3 Any liability , injury , loss or damage that occurs outside the territorial limits of the policy unless you have paid an extra premium to have insurance cover outside the territorial limits .
4 Any liability , injury , loss or damage that occurs outside the territorial limits of the policy unless you have paid an extra premium to have insurance cover outside the territorial limits .
5 Any liability , injury , loss or damage that occurs outside the territorial limits of the policy unless you have paid an extra premium to have insurance cover outside the territorial limits .
6 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 .
7 The sounds of Danish mingled with those of knives drawn across a plate , the screech of jays , and the buzz and hum that rose from within her and ousted her tranquillity .
8 And let that sit in the shoe box and then tape the shoe box .
9 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 .
10 The cavalry had already ridden through the pall of dust and smoke that hung over the demolished Cutcherry and now they were ready to hurl themselves at the garrison , hastily assembled behind the churchyard wall .
11 Find the highest score of all the other content words in that position , and add that score to the ’ highest-other-word scorelist ’ .
12 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 ’ .
13 We will reduce the proportion of UK aid tied to the purchase of UK goods and services and ensure that help to British exports is solely a function of the Department of Trade and Industry , rather than the ODA .
14 Idly she unravelled the muddle of paths , wandering past low , stunted railings , and dwarf ‘ Keep off the grass ’ signs sprouting from the balding turf ; past desolate putting greens ; past tightly-shuttered refreshment kiosks ; past the narrow lanes marked ‘ Men ’ and Women' that commenced at a modest distance from each other and wound through dark shrubbery to merge in a single , dripping tomb , divided by a wall .
15 But after 1936 — a turning point for Poland — only the French continued to supply finance ( over 2,600 million francs ) and roughly half of the trade credits and finance that flowed through the economy came directly from the state .
16 We now analyse those aspects of management and control that relate to particular jobs rather than to the practice as a whole .
17 And there is one well-known fact of present-day RP and SBE that points to the importance of the velars in the ancestral forms of those dialects also .
18 The sound of the explosion melded into a terrible noise that was like an animal dying in awful , bellowing pain , but beneath that sound of agony was a harsh metallic scrape and clash that punched at my belly and eardrums .
19 All it had been was a futile expression of the frustration and anger that bubbled inside her .
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