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

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1 Indeed , the most potent argument against it may be that we know only too well how protectionism contributed to the great depression of the 1930s .
2 The trouble is that nobody knows where the road leads .
3 Essentially the message is that nobody knows how far community care can be made to stretch without snapping under the strain .
4 ‘ The problem dealing with Iranian or Lebanese Shi'ite terrorists is that we know comparatively little about them .
5 ‘ What 's not fair , ’ Cranston interrupted , ‘ is that we know so little about last night .
6 Thus it is that we know as much as we do about the Orynthia and her voyages in the late 1830s .
7 The great skill of Japanese and German manufacturers is that they know how to make things efficiently and well , which is what we are so bad at .
8 For what is being suggested is that I knew today and not yesterday , despite the fact that there was no difference between the two days that I could tell at the time .
9 ‘ But all that means is that I know damn well what not to do .
10 The most important factor in ‘ free stretching ’ is that you know when it hurts and how far you can go , making it possible for you to immediately release the stretch should you need to .
11 ‘ I do n't mind where I go , but I prefer opening , and the main thing is that you know where you are . ’
12 And what you are telling me is that he knew very well Aldhelm was to come here that night .
13 Aaron Wildavsky argued that while PPBS had many shortcomings , the fundamental reason for its demise was that no-one knew how to do programme budgeting .
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