Example sentences of "[adv] [that] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | He realized gloomily that individually , Western people suffer from debt just as Third World people do . |
2 | When she had finished , he suggested gently that perhaps he might meet Grégoire . |
3 | As J. D. North , who has drawn attention to these , remarks , ‘ Taken singly , the records are easy to view with scepticism , but taking them together , and noting especially that relatively large sums of money are involved in payment for the materials used , they persuade us that the mechanical clock had indeed arrived on the scene . ’ |
4 | He felt illogically that somehow he was responsible for introducing a dissonant element into the Club . |
5 | Perhaps that also explains the change in his voice . |
6 | If it is so necessary for us to opt one way or the other , is it perhaps that here too Christianity has caused a split in human nature of which the people of harmony knew nothing ? " |
7 | Apparently the International Multimedia Association , a party to COSE , is having discussions with Intel Corp about how to handle Intel 's own multimedia standard : perhaps that too will become part of the broadening COSE specification . |
8 | But perhaps that only encouraged them to move faster elsewhere . ’ |
9 | The well-remembered texture of it triggered off vivid flashes of memory , so that past and present blurred together , confusing her still further . |
10 | Erm , so that clearly is trying to get across the fact that this is a transitional and phased implementation , where costs are gradually increasing . |
11 | In particular , for sinusoidal excitation , the ratio between the secondary phasor potential differences will be But when the bridge is balanced as judged by null reading of the detector , say by varying Z 2 , so that Clearly , balancing the bridge circuit allows an unknown impedance Z 1 to be found in terms of a known impedance Z 2 and known turns ratio . |
12 | This proof suffers from a slight defect in that one of our later aims is to show how to construct Q on the basis of Z so that officially Q does not yet exist . |
13 | Each new chairman , as the PSOE 's transport policy document complained , brought with him a ‘ cascade of appointments and political reorganisations ’ in the company ( PSOE 1981 : 62 ) , so that superficially at least RENFE was in constant upheaval . |
14 | For example , we might find that the experiences of children in care differ according to the circumstances surrounding their entry , so that grossly abused children may stay longer and occasionally be adopted , while offenders might return to their parents after a relatively short spell in a residential establishment . |
15 | Always the demand is for ‘ practical ’ skills , while academic analysis remains a despised pastime , so that even the Superintendents ' Association ( the equivalent of the Police Federation for the lower ranks ) has similarly denied any place for intellectualism for its members . |
16 | Other than that , it was important that she should look interesting so that even if what she said was dull the audience would not be bored ; that the outfit should take account of the long range view — jewellery or other small items were irrelevant — and that it should draw attention to her face . |
17 | She was able to organize her day so that even though she seemed to be less harassed than Maggie the meals were always delicious and on time . |
18 | Conscience , in fact , is still alive in this world of Neapolitan terror so that even Russell Dixon 's Cardinal , having murdered his mistress ( the fetching Patricia Kerrigan ) on a poisoned Bible , ritually crosses himself and gently caresses her hair . |
19 | Moreover , modern legislation has made possible ( within limits ) the creation of an irrevocable power of attorney , so that even knowledge of the principal 's death or insanity will not affect the validity of acts done under it . |
20 | That project will then be abandoned in favour of some other quickly completable component elsewhere , so that even relatively minor works can take years to finish . |
21 | Ironically , the first three months of 1992 were the wettest in the this part of the country for many years , so that even the flowers in the desert , just a few miles inland , burst into bloom . |
22 | Fresh water gastropods are different from marine ones , and within the marine habitat itself the gastropods are strongly zoned ecologically , so that even on the same shore different species will be found in different areas according to their relation to the tide marks , degree of exposure , their diet , and so on . |
23 | Maggie picked up the poker and jabbed the fire with it , rearranging the coals so that even more heat was thrown out . |
24 | So much so that even the duties of an under-butler are now beyond his capabilities . |
25 | So that even in the dark of your broken spirit |
26 | The latter usually restricts its activities to areas of thicker vegetation , whereas Microtus agrestis favours more open areas , so that even if it is less common overall in the habitat it is more susceptible to predation by the owl and is taken more frequently . |
27 | There is no record of its occupying caves at any time , but it must always be remembered that a woodland species in cave country could drop its pellets from the tree in which it is roosting to fall into or near cave openings , so that even without entering a cave the pellets of such a predator could accumulate inside the cave ( see p. 96 ) . |
28 | As it is , with four seasons lost to the War , Jimmy reached 200 Southern League games , so that even today he is comfortably within our top forty all-time appearances , while only Joe Johnson and Harry Collyer played more often for us in the Southern League . |
29 | Teaching is a purposive activity , so that even though the teacher or school may not formulate aims consciously they will be implicit in the teaching , and will influence the course of the student 's education . |
30 | Instead , say Deschamp and Cooke , they probably make the cell less yielding , so that even high turgor can not elongate the cell into the feathery form . |