Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adj] [noun] that [vb mod] " in BNC.
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1 | I think that teachers need to know people that they can turn to for further advice , but that they could familiarize themselves much more with what , as it were , they can do in the first instance by screening children , by using there are number of published materials , learning inventories , that can be used to discover whether a child has some difficulties that might point in this direction of dyslexia . |
2 | One is that animals memorize local landmarks and directions on their way out , and simply reverse the directions to find their way home ; a second is that the home site itself has some property that can be recognized at a distance . |
3 | This is somewhat ironic when it is realized that local government has substantial resources that can not be used because of centrally-imposed prescriptions . |
4 | But , as Godwin comments , the room he describes is not an example of the direst stage of London poverty , for it contains various objects that could be sold . |
5 | The relief commission has one aircraft that can land there , a Twin Otter . |
6 | We have asked your embassy to see if she has any connections that may be of interest to us . |
7 | If anyone has any information that could help , we 'll be glad to pass it on . |
8 | Significantly , the Education Reform Bill contains two measures that will curtail local authority powers still further . |
9 | DEC has new software that will allow Sun workstations to connect to its Network Application Support architecture , the middleware bridge between applications and platforms for users to access information anywhere on the network regardless of operating system or network topology . |
10 | He discovered it has two electrons that could be described as ready and waiting to form chemical bonds . |
11 | Firstly , it contains special nutrients that will effectively stimulate skin cell activity and so repair past damage . |
12 | It is perhaps the detailed pigment chapter which holds most information that will prove valuable to working artists . |
13 | What molecular geneticists — among them Sharp — have now discovered is that one of these families does in fact have some of the hallmarks of a transposon , and moreover has special properties that would tend to promote its expansion in succeeding generations . |
14 | Natural selection favours those individuals that can tell when they have been parasitised and eject the cuckoo 's eggs . |
15 | ‘ THIS RECORD might be the stuff of tragi-comedy , but the funereal tune with cumbersome guitars and world-weary singing kills any irony that may be hidden in the lyrics . ’ |
16 | A newly described assemblage from black shales in the Doushantuo Formation ( Yangtze Gorges ) in China includes tubular fossils that might have been occupied by metazoans . |
17 | The new functionality includes distributed schemas that can be shared by application developers to ease development of related applications ; detachable databases for more flexible distribution of databases ; on-line incremental backup and restore for high availability of databases in production environments ; schema evolution and object migration for upgrading deployed object applications and new database administrative tools and programmatic interfaces so developers can include database administration functions in applications . |
18 | He walks past barricades which have been torn down ; he sees black pools that must be blood ; houses have their blinds hanging like rags from a single nail . |
19 | But the group is convinced that it is only a matter of time before someone discovers superconducting semiconductors that will work at the economically viable temperatures of liquid nitrogen . |
20 | But there is a trick to feeling the need for a tenth rehearsal during the ninth rehearsal because one still hears many things that can become better , because one still knows something to say in the tenth rehearsal . |
21 | What is evident is that the age of electronic records opens numerous possibilities that will enrich the understanding of contemporary culture . |
22 | A new s 382B is also added ; this provides that , if the sole member takes any decision that could have been taken in general meeting , that member shall ( unless it is a written resolution ) provide the company with a written record of it . |
23 | The first part of the job requires new missiles that can be easily transported , and radars to guide them . |
24 | A manager can also take the initial foundation course which tackles those issues that may be relevant to any manager , whether inside or outside the CAB . |
25 | The first rule governs some processes that might not involve an overall change of spin , but it is conveniently considered with the spin rule . |
26 | The criminal law defines only some types of violence as criminal assault ; it excludes verbal assaults that can , and sometimes do , break a person 's spirit ; it excludes forms of assault whose injuries become apparent years later , such as those resulting from working in a polluted factory environment where the health risk was known to the employer but concealed from the employee ( Swartz 1975 ) ; it excludes ‘ compulsory ’ drug-therapy or electric-shock treatment given to ‘ mentally disturbed ’ patients or prisoners who are denied the civilized rights to refuse such beneficial medical help ( Mitford 1977 ; Szasz 1970,1977a , 1977b ) ; it excludes chemotherapy prescribed to control ‘ naughty ’ schoolboys , but includes physically hitting teachers ( Box 1981b ; Schrag and Divoky 1981 ) . |
27 | It is the moral law which governs interpersonal relationships that must be reflected in statute law , suggesting a field of public morality which is the preserve of the state and a field of private morality which is not . |
28 | In effect the staff , in making this statement , are erecting a ‘ fence ’ around the unit which excludes those agencies that might otherwise expect to be involved . |
29 | The Collins English Dictionary ( CED ) lists other derivatives that can be formed from a headword . |
30 | A jitter , caused by the way the solar panels ( which provide power ) buckle when the telescope moves into and out of the earth 's shadow , disturbs those observations that can be made . |