Example sentences of "of [noun] that " in BNC.

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1 He was a little the worse for drink and there had been an argument over a bottle of whisky that Drew had in his pocket .
2 So the cost of a bottle of whisky that you buy on the plane home from holiday , is made up of both the manufacturer 's price and the airline 's profit .
3 They became great friends and when they did that film in Africa they had a 15-hundredweight truck behind them absolutely full of whisky that followed them everywhere they went .
4 And they give them a gill of whisky that was supposed to be for their lunch you see .
5 ‘ I suppose I was feeling a bit guilty about being here , ’ she confessed in a burst of honesty that she instantly wished back .
6 Depression now wrapped itself about her , making concentration difficult , while the thought of Silas holding Doreen in his arms brought a sudden flare of honesty that caused her to admit she was jealous .
7 He began to sweat , a weird cold extrusion of moisture that began to trickle down his face .
8 The nights grew colder , but in the early morning the rising sun was caught a thousand times in the droplets of moisture that formed in the webs that spiders wove across the bars of Creggan 's cage .
9 What it will do is to identify those kinds of misspelling that most pupils are likely to make : appropriate teaching at this stage helps to avoid remedial teaching later .
10 However , with 12 of the 14-man squad destined for the Caribbean , it does offer the opportunity of forging ( under the new triumvirate of Graham Gooch , Allan Lamb and Micky Stewart ) the kind of unity that will be essential when the flak is flying at the Queen 's Park Oval and Sabina Park .
11 The movement of ions that depolarises part of the nerve cell membrane results in a potential difference between it and the part adjacent to it .
12 A new industry minister , Victor Joy Wa , took a third tack , announcing to startled industrialists that he will do away with all privileges for all manufacturers save exporters , who can expect reimbursement of taxes that ‘ should not be exported ’ .
13 As a consequence , the direct relationship between the cost calculation and the fixing of taxes that we have set up here is inapplicable .
14 His letters to Helen , in particular , uncover the head for business , the punctilious sense of irritable rightness , and the concomitant sudden bouts of self-distrust that marched alongside his desire for an extended life of idealized perfection , similar to the intense moments of joyful peace he had discovered for himself during walks .
15 The enthusiasm of the common people for the old sports was weakened to such an extent that there was a genuine receptiveness on the part of the mass of the population to the revised forms of play that were being nurtured amongst the privileged in the mid-Victorian public schools .
16 It is only by stressing the element of play that the imposition of totalitarian meaning of any kind can be avoided .
17 The machines find them , or anyway , enough of them , so that the computers can often win despite an intrinsic quality of play that is so inane as to be comic , as is readily apparent when two computers play each other .
18 One form of play that is particularly important in the development of children explores human roles .
19 THE WELSH are closing in on the standards of play that immortalised the sixties and seventies as the golden age of their rugby .
20 It was a standard opening — the kind of play that made no real difference to the final outcome — yet somehow the boy made it seem a challenge .
21 This is not because it can be proved one way or the other that either or neither version is the type of play that Marlowe would have written .
22 I , I really feel two pound fifty is low for the quality of , of play that they 're seeing I mean other amateur groups not that we 're comparing ourselves , but they certainly charge more than us and quite honestly the end product on some of them is not up to our end product .
23 It was , therefore , completely against the run of play that Clydebank scored seconds before the break .
24 We need a system of assessment that will encourage , not inhibit , the development of the imagination , and the new emphasis on practical skills as of equal importance with scholarship and learning .
25 This is a very brief view of the type of assessment that is made during constitutional treatment .
26 It is in the field of assessment that the new arrangements are likely to pose the most difficulties for teachers and distract them from their first task of finding their way into ‘ the very queer and tortuous passages of children 's minds ’ .
27 The essential vulnerability reinforces the requirement that the starting point of design should be a clarification of objectives followed by a consideration of the criteria of assessment that the objectives have been achieved .
28 Expert classifications of disability and difficulty , and the apparatus of assessment that goes with them , appear to be scientifically objective .
29 The term has even been used to refer to any form of assessment that is not norm-referenced .
30 Editor , — In her review of methods of assessing students Stella Lowry argues the need for methods of assessment that match learning objectives .
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