Example sentences of "[adv] that a " in BNC.

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1 There may also have been certain conditions of the advance ( eg that a woodworm infestation shall be treated before completion , that certain repairs shall have been carried out or a deduction made from the mortgage loan until they have been ) .
2 Beneath and down-wind of the ash cloud there is a steady rain of fine ash particles , sometimes falling so thickly that a dark curtain appears to be hanging beneath the cloud , while in and around it electrical storms rage , with lightning flickering frequently , so that the whole effect is much more dramatic than even the most ominous of thunderclouds .
3 And if these stories are to be believed then Jesus was a walker too , liking nothing better that a hearty stroll in the beautiful Mendip Hills in Somerset .
4 I stopped in mid-stride , so suddenly that an oystercatcher , which had been guddling among the reeds at the edge of the lochan , took off seawards with a screamed complaint .
5 At the end of August 1914 he was promoted to Brigadier on the field ; so suddenly that an elderly spinster had to furnish him with stars unsewn from her father 's uniform .
6 These rolls were a speciality of Baden , and the people of Zurich liked them so much that a special train used to leave Baden early every morning so that they were in Zurich fresh and in time for breakfast .
7 Its Report The future of development plans , published in 1965 , recommended changes , basically that a number of different types of plans should replace the development plan and the comprehensive development area plans .
8 On the wall to the right of the door was a small illuminated case with the label ‘ Appearing this week ’ , and below that a selection of coloured photographs was pinned to a board covered in cheap red plush .
9 The kind of norms we are concerned with here are sometimes called community norms in order to distinguish them from the superordinate norms that I have mentioned , and I shall suggest below that a major difference between superordinate and community norms is that , whereas ‘ standard ’ norms are uniform , community norms are sometimes more aptly described as variable norms .
10 It was bad enough that a National Front MEP should emerge as chairman of the delegation to the Swiss parliament ; worse still that one of Mr Schonhuber 's men should be vice-chairman of the delegation to Israel 's Knesset .
11 It was enough that a government official in the OEOB , with its mock-French , slightly creepy grandeur , right beside the White House , had told him not to tell anybody .
12 Of course , I would be very guarded about allowing the Wizard from Oz 's sound to be the sole influence in choosing an instrument , because it ca n't be said often enough that a player 's style is almost as individual as his DNA .
13 Overcoming this Catch 22 has cost modern fusion research billions of dollars so far , using arrays of magnets as big as houses in order to contain the fuel at temperatures ten times hotter even than those in the centre of the Sun , and making it dense enough and stable enough that a self-sustaining reaction can occur .
14 Glitter answers questions banal enough that a child of six might be able to pose them , and then it 's into the show .
15 It is enough that a project satisfy the purpose of ‘ the advancement of knowledge in biological or behavioural sciences , ( section 5.3(d) ) , although the applicant must then justify the necessity of using animals at all ( 5.5 ) , and in specific terms if the use of larger mammals is proposed ( 5.6 ) .
16 In other words , it is not enough that a cell should be more or less active ; the change must be sufficiently unusual statistically for it to function as a code .
17 It is obvious enough that a neocortex would be useless if all its neurons responded to the same or strongly similar features , so decorrelation is useful for this purpose , but it also confers another great advantage .
18 It is not enough that a man should say that something shall not be done by the plaintiff ; he must say that nothing shall . ’
19 It is not enough that a state is unlucky or incompetent in its economic , social or foreign policies — that jobs or food are scarce , or that it is at war with itself or with its neighbours .
20 The Lord President ( Cooper ) in IRC v Gordon 33 TC 226 at 230 stated that : … it is not enough that a person resident in the United Kingdom should somehow have derived benefit from the income of a foreign possession … the duty of the Court was to seek for an actual remittance to , and receipt in , the United Kingdom and not to be lead astray by an " equivalent " to a remittance or receipt , or a " constructive receipt " .
21 It can not be stressed enough that an adequate system for financial control must be a priority matter for the haulier .
22 The Northern Ireland ( Emergency Provisions ) Act laid down that a person arrested on suspicion could be held without further formality for up to twenty-one days .
23 For some of the expressions employed would seem to lay it down that a joint debtee might release one of his debtors , and yet , by using some language of reservation in the agreement between himself and such debtor , keep his remedy entire against the others , even without consulting them .
24 She was also told in order to calm her down that a blood transfusion was most unlikely and she did not have to face , it appears , the possible serious or even fatal consequences of her decision .
25 The principal provisions pertaining to the structure of the learned profession lay down that a candidate for office , a mulazim ( mulazim ) shall first teach at a 20-akce medrese , that is , one at which the stipulated salary of the muderris is twenty akce daily , and shall then proceed to advance by 50-akce stages ( e.g. to a 25- , then to a 30-akce medrese , and so on ) until he reaches the 50-akce medreses of which there are three classes : and the Sahn .
26 The treaty lays down that a single currency will come into being by 1999 , but only if those convergence conditions are met and only for those countries which meet them .
27 In Yates Circuit Foil Co v Electrofoils Ltd [ 1976 ] FSR 345 Whitford J said " I know of no direct authority which has laid it down that a fetter can be placed upon the disclosure of a body of information of a general character if the body of information is over some particular size " .
28 When he took Nicandra 's plate away he held it for Maman to see , hoping perhaps that a little annoyance might irritate her back to liveliness .
29 It proves perhaps that a tree need n't be tall to be proud .
30 If we assume that this ratio is stable and repeat our earlier point that banks will normally be looking to expand their lending as a source of profit , then it follows fairly obviously that a change in the availability of base money to banks must be matched by a change in the size of the total balance sheet and that this latter change must be some multiple of the change in the size of the base .
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