Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] [adv] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I mean I one of the things that I 've always sort of had in mind is that we put it down in the reception area . |
2 | It 's just that I 've really Chairman , page thirty- three , little one could somebody er the growth , a review of the authority contracts hire for officers . |
3 | It amused him too that I used only pins to mount most of the items on the card . |
4 | She was surprised to find that she felt only contempt . |
5 | Not that she would have seen it as any sacrifice that she had neither husband nor child . |
6 | ‘ The main problem is that the illness makes her foodpipe so sore that she drinks only milk and rarely eats solids . |
7 | She recognizes the fact that she loves both Paul and Bernard , but transposes this love onto the plane of the sacred and finds herself released from sexual desire . |
8 | Sometimes you dream things that you 've never sort of c Have you finished with engines ? |
9 | These can be quite complicated and it is important that you understand both systems . |
10 | It is true that a good marathon time shows that you have both fitness and endurance , but because of the effort you have made , you will not be able to exploit those gains for some time . |
11 | There 's nowhere that you see anywhere advertising |
12 | In all that time we have actually had two people say yes I would like to cancel , of all the policies that we 've actually issues . |
13 | He knows — not least because he and I have discussed the matter on a number of occasions — that we take seriously people 's right to register a complaint , and that complaints are investigated seriously . |
14 | As for resources , the hon. Lady will know that we spent about £3 billion on the health service in Scotland last year , which is more than £600 per head for every man , woman and child in the country and represents an increase of about 38 per cent . |
15 | The real trouble is that we hand over £18 a week for every family in Britain — a total of £14,000 million — through the common agricultural policy . |
16 | ‘ There is no doubt at all in my mind that we have all lives many lives before and that we have an individual life-force which never dies . ’ |
17 | As to European political union , it is vital that we consider favourably proposals for increased confidence for qualified majority voting and for co-decision , not just because the Community 's budget is so large that we need improved accountability and democratic restraint , but because in so many other areas — such as in respect of the environment , conditions of employment and judicial co-operation — common responsibility requires the same observance of high standards . |
18 | Alternatively , their loyalty may be captured by the career staff in their departments so that they become primarily spokespersons for , and defenders of , department policies against encroachments from elsewhere . |
19 | Although open tipped tubes and intraluminal strain gauges have been widely used for the measurement of contractile activity in the colon , it has been argued on theoretical grounds that they detect only lumen occluding contractions , and therefore underestimate the incidence of contractile activity . |
20 | The fascination of this paper is that they bring together philosophy and psychology empirically in a way that has value for the busy social work practitioner . |
21 | If you look at most textbooks of ten or fifteen years ago in your library , you will find that they contain mainly text . |
22 | The failure of the GIST initiative surely lay in the naivety of its approach : the researchers were so concerned to promote a positive ‘ image ’ of science that they brushed aside pupils ' questions on the reality . |
23 | We will use existing , successful programmes like ‘ From Our Own Correspondent ’ , but increase their range so that they cover home stories as well . |
24 | I learnt , many years later , that they paid over £30 to have a book of poems printed , and that it sold two copies . |
25 | Common to these patches is the claim that they deliver either nicotine or ‘ nicotine extract ’ and the promise of great savings over patch products ‘ sold by our competitors . ’ |
26 | The activities of Whips are a mystery to most people outside Parliament but it is known that they do occasionally cajole , threaten and even bully MPs who might not toe the party line . |
27 | She was deaf to the arguments of those who told her that they would detract from the product , that they promoted only ugliness . |
28 | The same was not true of the broader European Economic Community , which despite its wider brief demonstrated that it had both strength and flexibility . |
29 | Then another smashed the window and grabbed a bag — only to discover that it contained just 1p . |
30 | If Irish industry is indeed managing its 17 000 out of 20 000 tonnes production of toxic wastes so efficiently that it pollutes neither land nor water then Ireland ought , by right , to become top European advisor on wastes handling . |