Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [vb -s] them " in BNC.

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1 There 's the insurances and the tale that she tells them but tha , I think they 'll have that weighed up you know .
2 Yeah it wants to be just enough inside here that it frightens them .
3 And if they think that it suits them to shift a factory to the Philippines because there wo n't be an inspection there , that 's what they 'll do .
4 One drawback of the Masters for married men , who want to see the last putt in , is that it requires them to creep to bed as if they were returning from a night club .
5 They then have to try and unravel it and , in so doing , will find that it takes them in all sorts of different places until at the end they find a small present .
6 It is therefore not unusual for junior nurses to feel that it takes them some time to " settle in " on a surgical ward .
7 In this way the youngsters make it clear that they are not yet mature enough to be considered rivals for territories or breeding partners and are allowed to feed on the reef beside their parents for the several months that it takes them to grow to maturity .
8 This intake of information from several sources at once is a complex process , and the value to learners of silent viewing is that it lets them concentrate on one element at a time .
9 One key reason why leasing remains popular with companies is that it enables them to expand through investment without damaging cash flow .
10 Some students find that it helps them to make a brief précis of the situation , though you should n't waste too much time in writing out points which you already have set down in front of you .
11 Some say that it helps them to study , but do n't accept that .
12 Nevertheless , even though having angles equal to two right angles is not part of a triangle 's essence , it is because it is a three-sided plane figure that it has them .
13 Now given this analysis of the animal 's ‘ thin ’ or attenuated concept of recognition , it will not be open to Frey to employ the strategy he uses against ‘ simple ’ desires , which bypass beliefs , by attempting to trap their advocate with the question whether or not the animal is aware that it has them ( 1980 : 104–5 , and Chapter 2 , above ) .
14 Some people prefer to work their male ferret on a line , saying that it gives them control over its movements .
15 Only it holds onto the hairs so much that it rips them out so that you end up with legs with no hairs on it but ah !
16 Bodies have welcomed particularly this component of the application procedures , stating that it provides them with a good reference point for budgetary control through the course of their financial years .
17 His views are taken to task by Lancelot , the hero of Kingsley 's Yeast ( 1848 ) : ‘ It may suit the Mr Lyles of this age … to make the people constantly and visibly comprehend that property is their protector and their friend , but I question whether it will suit the people themselves , unless they can make property understand that it owes them something more definite than protection . ’
18 It 's not the buying them that 's cunning , it 's just that I ca n't help being grateful ( I did n't actually say I was grateful , but I was n't sharp ) , it 's that he presents them so humbly , with such an air of please-don't-thank-me and I-deserve-it-all .
19 In both cases the wages of journeywomen were so low that he associates them with prostitution : " Take a survey of all the common women of the town , who take their walks between Charing Cross and Fleet Ditch , and I am persuaded more than half of them have been bred milliners . "
20 What is most important , however , is that he embodies them in a distinction , crucially important for his thought , between two sorts of science : ‘ indefinite science ’ , which ‘ consists in the knowledge of the causes of all things ’ , and the study of some ‘ limited ’ question about the ‘ cause of some determined appearance ’ such as heat .
21 I hope that he learns them well , because he will need to deploy them for a long time .
22 Someone told me that even the ultimate big boss himself was planning to look in this evening — probably to inspect your body and soul , now that he owns them . ’
23 If the buyer retains the goods for more than a reasonable length of time without informing the seller that he rejects them .
24 Not that he plays them all that well , ’ he admitted , thoughtfully watching the harried youngster trying to be as tall as his tallest and most formidable charge .
25 Everything in his relation to his slaves shows that he treats them as more or less human — his humiliations of them , his disappointments , his jealousies , his fears , his punishments , his attachments .
26 The Chancellor has indicated that he taxes categories of alcoholic drinks , and that he treats them differently because he wishes to retain ‘ flexibility ’ .
27 It is not enough that he believes them to have been stolen : Haughton v Smith [ 1975 ] AC 476 ( HL ) .
28 Nothing particular follows from the fact that he visits them once a month , except perhaps we infer that he has a close relationship with them .
29 It was held that a manufacturer of products , which he sells in such a form as to show that he intends them to reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they left him , with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination , and with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products will result in injury to the consumer 's life or property , owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care .
30 A manufacturer of products , which he sells in such a form as to show that he intends them –o reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they left him , with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination , and with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products is likely to result in injury to the consumer 's life or property , owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care .
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