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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 As all of these may have default options , it is important that the designer should make positive decisions about them and ensure that the file does reflect the design intended for it .
2 Letting someone else decide — most often manifest in people applying for a wide range of jobs perhaps with little in , because they are unable to decide which is most appropriate for them and hoping that somehow the right choice will be made by the employers themselves .
3 Levi defines long-firm fraud as referring to businesses which order substantial quantities of goods on credit at a time when the owners of the business either intend not to pay for them or suspect that they will not be able to pay for them .
4 The members of this family are genetically identical and this was confirmed by making skin grafts between them and finding that they were not rejected .
5 Marius was dismissive about both of them and thought that if they could n't manage two weeks of bedmaking and personal organisation then they should have stayed at home .
6 Attendance at this meeting was small , due in part to the absence of teachers who are in the National Display Team and are performing that day in Edinburgh as guests of the S.W.K.F.A. We though of them and hoped that all was going well .
7 She had put them on without thinking , because they were what she had always worn for travelling outside London , but she began to wonder what David 's mother would think of them and to wish that she had put on her good black coat and skirt instead with one of her London hats .
8 It states that it is not ‘ cost effective ’ to care for premature babies as there is a high incidence of disabilities amongst them and stresses that the government could save between £70 million and £200 million ( if one includes their education ) by allowing them to die .
9 We would not have considered the orders today if the Opposition had not prayed against them and agreed that they should be debated with the main affirmative orders .
10 The mercenary ones simply put up with them and pretend that they love them for what they can get out of them .
11 There was never any doubt in his mind that they would or could do so , and indeed he heard their shouts and as the next wave lifted him was able to look down upon them and see that they were luffing to the wind and preparing to beat back towards him .
12 They do not have the wherewithal to carry out the administration and paperwork or to watch over them and ensure that they learn on the job and produce an effective piece of craftsmanship .
13 Fitzroy Maclean spoke to them and discovered that they were not at all suspicious .
14 God knows why but the cardinal had taken a liking to them and decreed that no one should harm them .
15 Again , the farmers spoken to liked the ATB system described to them and confirmed that , ‘ they felt training on a continuing basis , with an emphasis on feeding and handling techniques , health , etc. , was the best approach ’ .
16 Joyce 's material supposedly unfolds in the dreaming mind of a Dublin publican ; the story O'Brien 's narrator tells concerns a publican who operates his imagination altogether more systematically , locking up his fictional characters ‘ so that he can keep an eye on them and see that there is no boozing ’ ( O'Brien 1939 and 1975 : 35 ) .
17 Fenella looked over her shoulder at them and saw that they were looking at her with such blind trust and with such faith that cold anger rose in her at the evil Lord who had forced them to his work .
18 Made irrational by shock he stood and looked at them and believed that something terrible had happened to her .
  Next page