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

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1 One may quibble with some of Jakobson 's distinctions and classifications , but it must be stressed that these are only a small selection of the multitude of relationships that he identifies in the space of this short poem .
2 For example , one surface dyslexic can accurately define the irregular words that he regularizes in pronunciation tasks ( for instance , pronouncing ‘ colonel ’ as ‘ COL-OH-NELL ’ ) .
3 In 1990 Tesco made the Association the beneficiary of one of the six nationwide collections that it allows in its stores .
4 And he says he has acquired some skill in communicating technical ideas that he uses in presentations for Lucas .
5 The questions that one asks in a survey must be derived from the object of the research itself : the schedule is only a tool for obtaining information .
6 Indeed , Dahl locates the questions that he poses in New Haven in the context of a tradition of inquiry dating back to de Tocqueville .
7 I listened with great interest to my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool , West Derby ( Mr. Wareing ) when he recounted all the difficulties that one experiences in that unhappy country , or what is left of it at the moment .
8 For example , it is possible to monitor pollution from incinerator chimneys in hospitals and in that regard I sympathise with the hon. Member for Tooting ( Mr. Cox ) and the problems that he has in his constituency .
9 Will the Lord President explain the priorities that he adopts in providing time for debating the reports ?
10 I assure my hon. Friend that we look forward to receiving any further written representations that he has in addition to the cogent case that he has put before the House today .
11 Erm but this is more or less , indigenous within the engineering industry , there is even inherent within an engineering mind , and I 'm not with the planners or the technical experts , but even in the ordinary lay engineer , he looks to be able to do the job more efficiently , with the materials that he has in hand er and possibly introduce a new type of tool if he can get the proper material , and likewise the employer was doing the same thing .
12 I am delighted to be asked to deliver Lynda 's speech to such a large body of people committed to helping the disadvantaged and to be able to say a few words about how government is meeting the challenges that it faces in the developing world .
13 That is , how to give a child a knowledge of what has been accepted as right and what has been accepted as wrong , or , in other words , of good and evil ; and further , how this can be so well rooted in their minds that it produces in them an inclination to act automatically in accordance with what must be designated civilised behaviour .
14 Is there not a deep self that keeps active in the subconscious , expressing in dreams the thoughts that it evades in conscious life ?
15 Yes , erm , the , the most archetypal one is , is the miser of course , who , who turns up with a stale box of chocolates and an ingratiating smile , and proceeds to eat you out of house and home , and then when you 're at the supermarket , disappears mysteriously at the checkout , and returns when you 've paid with a , a bumper bag a crisps that he keeps in his bedroom when , in case he gets peckish at night .
16 The historian must first personally select the facts that he presents in his narrative because he can not include them all .
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