Example sentences of "[adv] [indef pn] [that] " in BNC.

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1 Well , basically everyone that 's present at these meetings should get our Work in Progress meeting minutes .
2 So nothing that happens to you in the course of your life can possibly change your genes , because they 've already been copied .
3 So , if the retailer moves the tea or coffee every few weeks and replaces it with another product ( perhaps one that does n't sell as well ) he can bring it to the customer 's attention .
4 You might even find that the lecturer 's blackboard work was straight out of a textbook , perhaps one that he has written himself .
5 Because recentralization of business my be a correct and and fashionable philosophy or perhaps one that is no longer fashionable I do n't know it still needs we believe a global approach a coherent approach to tie these things together so the organization can not only get the benefit of responsiveness and flexibility at a departmental but the leverage to exploit that information on behalf of the organization as a whole .
6 Sometimes make a contrast — follow a lively travelling movement , perhaps one that goes at random with a smooth sweep of movement performed in unison .
7 What happens then is that faith runs up against an awkward question or a scornful dismissal , and suddenly everything that had seemed so unmistakably certain , meaningful , true , collapses like a balloon leaving the remnants of faith limp and deflated .
8 The house seemed full of silence ; and suddenly everything that had happened earlier led to this .
9 Yes I I do n't really want to respond to that other than to say that Bond End is d it 's still an extremely important consideration , it 's in the conservation area , it 's an important part of Knaresborough and it was obviously something that members had in mind when they they made their decision on on the relative merits .
10 So work out roughly erm obviously something that 's absolutely perfect and very very neat is probably worth five .
11 There is no one ‘ best ’ policy , merely one that secures a broad enough basis of support to be agreed upon and passed .
12 Let us resolve that we will give something during the coming months , even if it is only something that we no longer need , to help those who are hungry and in desperate need .
13 Er I 'm not sure in in the case of the the example you 've given of the arising in Greater York that the question of a regional sop shopping centre would arise because that is not necessarily something that is generated within Greater York .
14 So something that you had to multiply by itself and get five of them all multiplied together and it equals two .
15 This process is not only one that occurs in everyday life , but has also to be carried out by scientists in the laboratory , or by coroners in coroners ' courts ( Atkinson 1978 ) .
16 ‘ Presumably they 're attracted to you , one way or another , so any warnings should come from you , and there 's only one that seems relevant in the circumstances .
17 there was only one rugby scoreline that made the news at the weekend … which is fair enough … but tonight there 's only one that matters to us and that 's Gloucester 19 Sale 16
18 she 's only one that 's left she 's got to do her own
19 It 's only one that can do it at a time we all have a role to play , we 're all part of that body are n't we that we 've looked at in some , what a lovely description it is , and some of us do n't look quite as good as the other part do we ?
20 It was the only one I knew this morning like , so fifty miles an hour he said to me He said to me , he said to me turn left at the roundabout there was only one that was marked on the floor , only one an actual erm roundabout with concrete and I drove straight over it
21 I think me Auntie Jean 's , she 'll go off her rocker because she is like I say , me Auntie Jean 's only one that she ever remembers cos like me Auntie Jean takes the meal , like every meal down for her and
22 The ‘ boy labour problem ’ was a feature of the larger social and political issues which dominated the Edwardian era , and obviously one that came to be taken seriously by contemporaries , in terms of the efficient functioning of the labour-market in general , and of specific problems deriving from the market , such as un- and underemployment , industrial training , casual and unskilled labour and , in the wider sphere , poverty and family morale .
23 Er this next form is basically one that we have to send to the Benefit Office
24 What I 'm suggesting is is that that is perhaps something that the panel should dwell on in their deliberations and their advice to the county .
25 The third part is perhaps something that erm , we find a little more difficult , I do found that er number two , number three and number four if you were n't careful blends very much into one another and actually then part three as far as I 'm concerned actually putting across the benefits is really the main part I think and that really is putting into everyday English what we know as professionals as in technical terms , cos if you go and talk to somebody whatever it is , they have n't got a clue we have , we talk about it all the time and I think the biggest criticism of the insurance industry as a whole is the fact that you do n't talk to people in English and that 's why it 's got such a foot in the door and I think the third part for me really is the most important part of the sales process , relating our cock-ups in English , the benefits the client .
26 Erm and I I ca n't help wondering , this is perhaps something that Mr Donson may well want to come back to , erm what Mr Donson 's position would be at subsequent local plan inquiries where local plans were to contain such policies and there was was n't to be a strategic basis er for those policies .
27 Here again , in 1857 , statute took away the whole of the matrimonial jurisdiction from the Ecclesiastical Courts and vested it in a new court , the Divorce Court , which was enabled to do not only everything that the Ecclesiastical Court could have done , but also what previously needed the combined efforts of the Ecclesiastical Courts , the Common Law Courts , and an Act of Parliament .
28 So everything that would hold water was put on the stove and er he did and then it they took it out to the
29 So everything that we 've got to pay out we invoice them
30 ‘ I guess that you have been to see Mrs Laura Lyons , ’ he said , and when I told him that he was right , he went on : ‘ When we put together everything that each of us has discovered , I expect we shall know almost everything about this case . ’
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