Example sentences of "that [conj] [pron] [verb] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 It is compatible with Windows , but if you 've got Windows would you need another system of file management ? and is n't that where I came in !
2 The trouble was that although he carried out his duties perfectly adequately , such employment was neither satisfying nor lasting .
3 That of course assumes that everything spent on transport in England is a national cost and that the policing of London is a national cost , but we say that once we settle down and allocate the nature of expenditure as between the two countries , disallowing the cost of running the southern region of the railways as a United Kingdom expense , it is perfectly clear , as the Scottish newspapers have often demonstrated under the heading ’ Scotching the Myth ’ — Scottish Television has demonstrated the same in a programme of the same name — that there is no question of Scotland being subsidised in the way that the hon. Gentleman suggests .
4 All I can tell you is that much will change , rapidly and dramatically , and that once you get over the shock you 'll discover everything has worked out for the better .
5 ‘ People think that once you move up to the marathon , then bang , that 's it , there 's no way back .
6 See , my idea originally was that cos it comes back from when I used to go in the in the Blue Anchor in Lancaster after work I mean we had everybody in there !
7 Yes , so that until they drop out of the system erm , erm , a year from when that stage one decision was making , the teams over the sub teams overall stage one times are likely to be erm considerably higher than they will be in the month immediately after that er multiple has dropped out .
8 But to me the excitement of the job is so much that if something comes along , I do n't think twice .
9 Let me advise Council now , that if they proceed down this primrose path any further then it becomes a resignation issue for me and , I suspect , many others who can not believe this farrago .
10 You 'll need to get agreement from everyone that if they end up in the minority they will bide by the majority decision .
11 At the time of the lobby revolt , ‘ No one could have been in any doubt that if they went over to [ the rebel papers ' ] side , they would cook their goose with Number Ten . ’
12 But they 're worried that if they turn down the property they may not get another .
13 To some extent the technology people are to blame for being too optimistic but they realised that if they spelled out the true uncertainty ( even if they knew it ) there would have been no investment at all , In the end the project is abandoned or has become so expensive that it can never be profitable .
14 This includes a lower bed , so that if they fall out they should not hurt themselves .
15 This stressed-out poor performer is motivated by the fear that he or she is highly disposable , and that if they ease up on their workload the axe will fall .
16 change their mind , there must be there must be nine other posts that if they look round they could civilianise not I mean they have n't got to tell the public much it have they you still talk about the same amount of officers being civilianised .
17 In an article in today 's Mail on Sunday Dr Owen also warns Tory leaders that if they rule out coalition with the Liberal Democrats they could end 13 years in
18 ‘ It seems to me that if one sets up a quango and it spends 26% of the money disbursed on its own administration , that is a pretty high percentage . ’
19 In general terms this means that if one sets up a trust to accumulate income , and the settlor has not completely divested himself of the trust property , he will be chargeable to income tax on the trust income .
20 Yeah , and it was their tradition was it that if one turned up with a dirty
21 It is true that if one searches on can find some aspects in which the outer northern route is preferable to the inner northern route .
22 It is a matter of common experience that if one heats up a poker in a fire it glows red hot and emits radiation , but bodies at lower temperatures emit radiation too ; one just does not normally notice it because the amount is fairly small .
23 It 's simpler to obtain large amounts of it and one hopes that if one finds out something of the mechanism through this enzyme one would be able to apply it to other enzymes dependent upon the same coenzyme .
24 So that if somebody come in to call , they 'd pull this thing and then Mr or somebody would open the the sliding door and you see .
25 For the implication of his theory of power is that if we break out of the regime of sexuality then power will play through a new series of discourses .
26 Erm I think they knew that if we went back under his conditions , their days would be numbered certainly .
27 On this question of priorities here I understand that if we go along with local presses , to the housing corporation that this is a priority and then they , they can see to that make the money available when can we go along again with another priorities ?
28 ‘ The fact is , ’ wrote Clark himself on 15 August , ‘ that if we lose out in the Middle East , we shall be immediately destroyed . ’
29 It was pointed out that if we switched back to dual membership the administration involved would be horrendous .
30 ‘ You 're saying that if someone goes up from the North Pole , and keeps going in a dead straight line a really truly dead straight line — they will eventually come to the Earth — ahead of them ?
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