Example sentences of "[noun sg] that [adj] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It 's a funny wheel that funny wheel for it .
2 We support the guidance that rigid separation of residential and industrial developments should be avoided .
3 And given the political sensitivity of so much of our work , it is under the secretary general 's guidance that difficult discussions on strengthening the movement 's development and human rights awareness programmes must take place and where the final green light must be given for increasingly complex initiatives to intensify public pressure on governments .
4 I was also under no illusion that some backbenchers on our side were nervous about the policy .
5 What elevated Griffith above his fellow technicians was that his sense of what a camera should record and his appreciation that new dimensions of filmic space could be appropriated were given meaning by their constant reference to central themes of American life .
6 ‘ … a more meaningful and relevant physical geography may emerge as the product of a new generation of physical geographers who are willing and able to face up to the contemporary needs of the whole subject , and who are prepared to concentrate on the areas of physical reality which are especially relevant to the man-oriented geography It is in the extinction of the traditional division between physical and human geography that new types of collaborative synthesis can arise . ’
7 It was again noted that he did not deny the wider allegation that other members of the Reagan election campaign had been involved in such a deal .
8 There is no allegation that any part of the money paid by the investors for the Euramco shares was paid to or received by the solicitors .
9 He accuses Gide of interpreting the Soviet experience from an excessively psychological , literary perspective with the result that genuine advances on the socioeconomic front are obscured , on the one hand , by an unwarranted preoccupation with the psychology of the Soviet people , and on the other , by bourgeois prejudices regarding the stultifying " conformism " of Soviet society .
10 One school , deciding that extra space for resource-based learning was a priority , took over a classroom for use in unstructured individualized work , with the result that other classrooms including some specialist rooms were more heavily used than before ; teachers complained that they could not get in to put up work on the blackboard beforehand , and were introduced to the more thorough use of the overhead projector ; the timetabler had to bear in mind the needs of some practical subjects where the previous laying-out of equipment was vital , but the exercise was valuable in focusing attention on such priorities and making them clear to everyone .
11 Radar transmitters blast out up to 100 kW , with the result that many areas of the deck are exposed to field intensities greater than 30 W/m .
12 Allocations under this heading are based upon estimates of actual numbers of pupils , with the result that discretionary expenditure on children above the minimum school leaving age is compensated , rather than adhering to a principle of assessing basic needs equitably .
13 The growth of any general practice whereby decisions of the Cabinet or of Cabinet committee were announced as such would lead to the embarrassing result that some decisions of government would be regarded as less authoritative than others .
14 The second , and economically important , consequence is that the ‘ new ’ water from the ocean bottom is dense with phosphate , nitrates and many other nutrients liked by planktonic life — with the result that this belt of water is stiff with plankton .
15 Similarly , if the police believed ( thanks to psychological theories ) that ‘ real ’ delinquents came from broken or otherwise disrupted homes , it could be that they would be more likely to take official action against offenders from such backgrounds , with the result that subsequent analysis of official ‘ delinquents ’ would automatically confirm the theories .
16 As these last few examples show , gestures of respect or disrespect , moving from verse to prose or back again , are often caused by the entry of one or more characters , with the result that those characters on stage have to readjust themselves , choose which medium they are going to use .
17 But whatever choice is made , it should be borne in mind that prolonged performance in this office may undermine independence .
18 The Audit Commission ( 1985 ) set out a framework for identifying degrees of dependency , bearing in mind that each person at home saved the state £3000 .
19 There is every reason to believe that this degree of movement was typical of the corn-growing regions , but we have to constantly bear in mind that one part of England may have very different experiences from another and that even neighbouring communities might have contrasting stories to tell .
20 ‘ It should be borne in mind that seasonal variations in stock market activity ususally result in lower turnover in the second half .
21 Although the order is subject to the condition precedent that ‘ the required drugs and equipment are or could reasonably be made available , ’ it makes no reference to the availability of staff and it has to be borne in mind that artificial ventilation of a young child in an intensive care unit is highly intensive of highly skilled staff .
22 And he might bear in mind that muddled dispositions in his will could somehow be validated if the jurists were able to construe them as trusts .
23 Meredith might not like him but he was a box office draw and bearing in mind that unfortunate incident in Windsor … .
24 Such are the mechanisms of the human mind that angry condemnation of homosexuality is often expressed by these very people .
25 When choosing your army bear in mind that some types of character model , war engines , or special troops are only available if your army includes Mobs of corresponding Orc or Goblin types .
26 The prehistory of Islay is not easily understood and one must use a great deal of imagination to build up a picture from what has been learnt by Investigation and excavation , bearing in mind that isolated pieces of evidence may be entirely unrepresentative of the normal life of the community .
27 As you prepare for the change in 1990 you should bear in mind that further regulations on the new Business Rate are still to be published .
28 Bear in mind that different types of heat source produce different levels of humidity Electricity , for example , is a drying heat which produces a slight condensation .
29 Further confirmation that public attitudes towards corporate crime are hardening and becoming more punitive have come from other American studies ( McCleary et al .
30 But the demonstration that high levels of p53 are induced by DNA damage has led to the concept that p53 might be part of a damage-control pathway rather than the pathways that are at work in normal development .
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