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

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1 And one interesting thing is that as we integrate that system as we double the number of users our requirements the loading on our system may go up by a factor of four .
2 Lind believes that as we become sensitized to a particular quality or relationship so attentive focus comes to oscillate amongst all the similar proximate elements .
3 My conviction is that as we take action , and show that we mean business , we will find that it is at that point precisely that the Holy Spirit comes to help us in our weakness and change everything from a mechanical discipline to an encounter with the living God .
4 However , I believe that as we keep pace with progress month by month we can reconsider further aid on top of the very substantial aid which continues to be well used in Kenya .
5 My friends , let's just remember this night that as we 've shared bread and wine together , we 've reaffirmed that Jesus Christ gave his life so that we might live .
6 And the idea is that as we 've done with previous erm , discussions , if each one could come along armed with some information to do with healthy eating , erm , there 's a list on page a hundred and seventeen , that might start you off thinking .
7 And some doctors think that as we get older our bodies are less efficient in taking up some nutrients in food , so extra amounts may be needed .
8 I will therefore be looking at the range of measures on offer to ensure that as we come out of the recession they offer unemployed people practical and effective help in getting back to work . ’
9 This latter fact simply means that as we go along the chain of correlated consequences to larger and larger systems the links in the chain become tighter and tighter , less and less subject to quantum mechanical " creakiness ' .
10 This means that as we use more and more observations we would expect the means of our estimators to tend towards their true values while the variability of the estimators decreases .
11 I agree that as we unfold our positive policies over the next few weeks , and as the electorate sees more and more of what Labour is offering — or not offering — what my hon. Friend has suggested will come about .
12 It is obvious that as we descend the grouping and prolongational hierarchies the structure becomes more elaborate .
13 I 've just realised that as we talk , we are hanging our show on the miners and that there is not one image by a woman .
14 However , what we begin to learn from this pattern is that as we move away from some relationships , we start to form others as part of a ‘ natural effect ’ ; and so the cycle of attachment and separation continues in the pattern of our lives .
15 ‘ It is my hope and conviction that as we journey closer to him we shall find ourselves travelling with others and imperceptibly growing together into his beauty and likeness , and away from the ugliness and bitterness which has dogged the history of our Communions .
16 ‘ We have to be careful that as we shed uniformed staff , it is on a gradual basis to avoid redundancies and to ensure that those who stay will still continue to have promotion prospects . ’
17 And who would have thought that as we face the 1990s the social and moral habits of the 1960s should be visited upon us in the guise of AIDS , which threatens to sweep across the world with all the terror and destruction of the black plague in the Middle Ages ?
18 It is salutary to note that as we start the 25th Anniversary year of the University the mean residence time of the 23 staff members of the Department of Biological and Molecular Sciences , including the three staff appointed in the last decade , is now 18 years .
19 I would hypothesise that as they draw , and the front of the mind is focused on that activity , the back of the mind is reflecting subconsciously , or even unconsciously , on the words they might use .
20 Women currently outlive men by about six years , so that as they retire five years earlier they can expect on average to spend twice as long as men in retirement .
21 The good news is that as they get older , most young people stop offending .
22 ‘ It seems to be that as they get older the prospect of cohabitation is less exciting for women .
23 Weber 's analysis also suggests that as they develop and become more bureaucratic ( see Chapter 3 ) , societies are likely to replace khadi justice with more rational and predictable forms of justice .
24 My Lords , is the Minister that nearly half of all surgical units are cutting back on operations a third are giving priority to patients of G P fund holders and more than half of the N H S Trust er er have a facing a steep rise in emergency admissions of the G Ps that as they fight to get beds for their patients .
25 Just possibly , the politicians might begin debating that as they campaign for November 's mayoral election .
26 Their greatest fear is that as they become weaker , ‘ caring authorities ’ will take them over and whisk them away to be ‘ looked after properly ’ .
27 There is also the unwelcome possibility that as they become mobile they move into sections of the system which you were entitled to think you had already cleared .
28 Barbara in particular is less than sympathetic towards him , but the old man eventually pours oil on troubled waters by explaining that as they travel together , so they will learn more of each other .
29 The individual cow-pats are often still very hot and plastic when they hit the ground , so that as they pile up one on top of each other , they spread out further , and weld together , forming a solid mass known as spatter .
30 Labour MPs , activists and union bosses would do well to remember that as they consider electing her deputy to a man who 's already had one heart attack . ’
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