Example sentences of "that [conj] [pers pn] [vb base] in " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ Role theory ’ says that where we arrive in society shapes our lives .
2 People litigate such cases ( which is both risky and expensive ) only because they believe that if they succeed in persuading some judge that a new rule would be in the public interest , that new rule will be applied retrospectively in their own favour .
3 The guys know that if they come in here , if they do cause any problem they get banned from here and they get banned from every other pub in the town .
4 Consultants are often fearful that these new styles of service will lead to the quality of care of acutely ill patients on the wards suffering ; they believe that the focus of community work is away from those who are most in need or are concerned that if they work in the community they will lose the professional day-to-day support of consultant colleagues .
5 It may seem that if we succeed in adapting our values to such disturbances instead of losing them altogether , it is because we still retain some vestige of a Christian and liberal moral tradition a memory of ‘ Do unto others … ’ at the roots of social habit , which saves us from the collapse into competing egoisms into which deepening conflicts are perpetually driving us .
6 The curvature is so intense that if we insist in using coordinates appropriate to distant flat space — time , then we find that space and time inside the horizon interchange the properties normally associated with them .
7 One thing that can be said in opposition to the simultaneity idea is that if we persist in thinking precisely of causation , of one thing causing another , as distinct from any related kind of connection , we are inclined to try to substitute successions for simultaneities .
8 Then , since there is no believing without some doubting and since believing is all the stronger for understanding and resolving doubt , we can say as Christians that if we doubt in believing it is also true that we believe in doubting .
9 The first thing to remember is that if we speak in terms of ‘ I ’ and ‘ me ’ , rather than ‘ you ’ , we run less danger of erecting barriers on the other side .
10 The second point is crucial for the reason that if we include in the set items that can not undergo the variation in question , or items that undergo different patterns of linguistic variation , the quantitative results will be false .
11 In which case , since Copenhagen is n't the biggest capital in Europe , the chances are that if we look in the right places we 'll find them sooner or later ! ’
12 The selling agent , Ellis ( 01-706 0844 ) , says it can arrange a Swiss mortgage to finance up to 60 per cent of the purchase price of the property — but remember that if you borrow in Swiss francs and the pound falls against the Swiss currency , the amount and cost of your mortgage could rise .
13 It has been a matter of debate because there are those in the council who feel that if you put in a contingency provision it will be spent whether it 's needed or not .
14 Generally ABC and Scritti 's ideas — that rock music is finished , and only black music is a viable vehicle for intelligence ; that if you believe in what you do you owe it to yourself to dive headfirst into the mainstream — still exert something verging on hegemony .
15 Another important implication of behavioural rights such as these , is that if you believe in your own rights then , to be consistent , you must also believe that other people enjoy the same rights .
16 He concluded by saying that if you believe in God you have to find other ways to convince people that He exists , and that was not something to be discussed in this lesson .
17 People always seem to assume that if you work in a library , you should know all there is to know about books .
18 I have given strict orders to my henchmen that if I die in suspicious circumstances , they are to hang my chaplain immediately .
19 ‘ He has just told me that if I continue in my present path , remain the fine , upstanding , clean-living boy I so evidently am , I may one day hope — wait for it — to be elected to — Gracious heavens ! — the Cullbridge Athenaeum ! ’
20 I 've accepted that if I open in a play in Lourdes about the life and times of Mother Teresa , the press will write : ‘ Yiddishe Momma in NUN-sense ’ .
21 I must explain that and I eat in a special compartment , screened from the other foreign friends , who pay for their own meals .
22 Editors might argue that because we live in a highly competitive world in which authors , readers , and advertisers can all go elsewhere with ease we are already sufficiently accountable .
23 Do n't imagine that because you live in an insignificant little village away " in the bush " you wo n't see anyone but the villagers .
24 The first is that whether we have in mind the student taking on the demands of the rational life , or the individual discipline considered as a rational endeavour , or an institution of higher education : for each of them rationality is neither static nor a definite end-point .
25 Do we find that when we sit in worship , often the language that preachers use , especially when they use some of the so called theological language .
26 Yeah but what they 're saying is it 's got ta be in the night before so that when they come in that next morning
27 If it 's inherited from an estate that of itself er attracts no tax , so there tax position would only be the income that they received from it would be subject to income tax and it would be added to their own assets so that when they die in due course then they 've inheritance payable there .
28 So you might want to remember that when you get in there cos on the first exhibit you 're gon na t have to use that bit of information .
29 He said : ‘ I feel that when you live in a town , you take the services for granted .
30 And , I feel that when I go in your room now very much that it is your room , and I feel the same when I go in Glenys 's , it 's her room
  Next page