Example sentences of "of the [noun] that the " in BNC.

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1 Campaigners for the Birmingham Six had hoped that a new Home Secretary might reconsider the convictions in the light of the discovery that the confessions of those convicted of the Guildford pub bombings had been fabricated , and the subsequent release of the four .
2 It was as a result of the discovery that the Parliamentary history of the legislation gave conclusive support to the construction I preferred that your Lordships agreed that the matter should be re-argued to determine whether it was permissible to use the Parliamentary history as an aid to the interpretation of the legislation .
3 We shall , therefore , focus on the question of the credibility of the threat that the non-deviating firms will actually carry out the punishment .
4 During the wait Mozart was given the chance of trying an organ in the local church ( something he was to do in many of the towns that the family later visited ) :
5 The soloist , Emma Johnson , had been joined by Sir Charles Groves and the RPO ; and it was evident from several members of the orchestra that the sessions had proved enjoyable for all concerned .
6 Fraud has been one of the problems that the factors/invoice discounters have had to tackle during the recession .
7 According to a spokesman for Newbury , Berkshire-based Cognito Ltd , one of the problems that the company has faced is that the network infrastructure was in the process of being dismantled when the management buyout got the go-ahead , so that much installation work had to be duplicated .
8 A third might have been deterred from adopting the Copernican theory because of his involvement with terrestrial mechanics and his awareness of the problems that the Copernican theory posed for it .
9 One of the problems that the Conservative government faced in the 1980s was that it depended on over 400 local authorities in England alone to implement large parts of its policies , for example housing , education and social services .
10 One of the problems that the college told me about is that school children are leaving school with more computer literacy than the university teachers , so university teachers are having to run hard simply to keep up with the people they are teaching .
11 That is the background to some of the problems that the report has highlighted .
12 But that that 's the problem that we all have This is one of the problems that the ju burdens that the judge has to bear .
13 oh I came , came to several conclusions , erm , one , one of the problems that the article faced me with , if it had been a simple outburst , if , if the , the Daily Telegraph had simply taken an advert out as opposed to maybe editorials then I may of had less a problem , because the problem with editorials is that they are believed , companies adverts are n't believed , well they 're partially believed , but an editorial carries a lot more weight and therefore when it 's written like that it tends to strike home much harder , therefore that , my immediate thoughts were that if were going to react , if we were going to find a way of cantering the problems we felt this had created , then we would not have to follow any normal course of action , we simply could n't put an advert out because nobody would have believed it , we would have to look at it a different way of actually cantering and that 's part of the reason for the time taking to think it through .
14 If it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the company is unable to pay its debts as they fall due ( Section 123(1) ( e ) ) .
15 If it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the value of the company 's assets is less than the amount of its liabilities , taking into account its contingent and prospective liabilities ( Section 123(2) ) .
16 It is in relation to that order of the court that the present proceedings arise .
17 The judge referred to a previous decision of his , In re H. ( Minor ) ( Abduction ) [ 1990 ] 2 F.L.R. 439 , but he said that that was to be distinguished because in that case there was in existence at the time of the removal an order of the court that the child should not be removed from the jurisdiction .
18 It is , no doubt , a sign of the times that the flow has long since dried up .
19 Is part of the problem that the schools just do n't communicate with the parents ?
20 In some churches a casual visitor gets the impression from the mournful atmosphere of the service that the congregation must be rehearsing their own funerals !
21 Immediate attention to requests for information is part of the service that the guest will appreciate .
22 Wary of causing further commotion , Jack said OK and found to his astonishment at the end of the service that the question had not been ‘ Do ye want a lift ? ’ at all — not at all , at all as they say in the Emerald Isle — but ‘ Do ye want to lift ? ’ , and as he staggered along on his then-arthritic hip bearing the coffin with five other pall-bearers , he kind of wished he 'd stuck to ‘ No thank you , I 'll walk . ’
23 According to Vergil , Gloucester announced to a meeting of the council that the Woodvilles were using witchcraft against him and then formally denounced Hastings for his involvement before calling in men at arms to arrest him .
24 By the time that the present case had reached the Court of Appeal , as many as 100 injunctions had been granted by judges of the Chancery Division , following the approach of Mervyn Davies J. By that time , too , the decision of the European Court of Justice in the Torfaen case had been followed by its decisions in the Conforama and Marchandise cases ; and it was the contention of the council that the approach of the court in the former case , upon which Wickes relied , had been tacitly abandoned by the court in the latter two cases .
25 Before your Lordships , it was submitted by Mr Isaacs on behalf of the council that the Court of Appeal had erred in requiring the council to give an undertaking in damages .
26 According to Vergil , Gloucester announced to a meeting of the council that the Woodvilles were using witchcraft against him and then formally denounced Hastings for his involvement before calling in men at arms to arrest him .
27 Perhaps erm pressure coming from local communities and ordinary people , rather than theologians at the top , and pressure released in order to allow for greater freedom , variety , flexibility , more open approach to other Christians and other religions , and to try to get rid of some of the obstacles that the past seems to place in our way .
28 It was argued on behalf of the respondents that the doctrine applied to a covenant which was imposed for the benefit of the trade of the covenantee and which either forbids the covenantor to carry on his trade or restricts the way in which he may carry it on .
29 One reviewer thought John Barleycorn ( 1914 ) ‘ the most powerful moral lesson ever conveyed in films ’ and stressed how brilliantly the ‘ selection of types ’ , the ‘ faithful depiction ’ of ‘ the underworld of sea-faring men ’ , and the very smell of the sea that the movie evoked all helped to convey the ‘ dehumanising effects of strong drink ’ .
30 However , the seriousness of the charge is itself part of the circumstances that the court should taken into account in deciding if the standard of proof has been met .
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