Example sentences of "[noun] [pron] [adv] [verb] that [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Such an approach is validated by a UK study which also showed that improvement is most likely if psychopathology is recognised and the pain is not constant . |
2 | It has certainly amplified those voices who persistently argue that viewpoint . |
3 | Where NVQs and SVQs are based on the same statements of competence the qualifications will carry titles which clearly indicate that area of competence . |
4 | Simon Simon I just saw that hand . |
5 | But the case of Sartre poignantly demonstrates that the return-to-history argument can really only succeed through a form of historical amnesia which conveniently forgets that history was almost impossible to find . |
6 | In the spring of 1977 I did indeed give birth to a boy who later grew that shock of fair hair . |
7 | When I worked as a primary school teacher I sometimes retrieved that feeling with a particular clarity , walking between the tables on the hard floor , all the little looms working but needing my constant adjustment . |
8 | Lawrence 's masquerade of adjustment involves a projection of his own fears , anxieties , and neurosis which , in the Swift/Celia case , is especially revealing because in the same breath he consciously repudiates the scapegoating process which partly comprises that projection ( pp. 303 — 4 ) . |
9 | Although adenosine receptors couple to several signalling systems in myocytes we now believe that protein kinase C ( PKC ) is the important one for preconditioning . |
10 | I got a stupid feeling I just moved that pawn again . |
11 | A lot of it is a matter of hearing : you just start to hear it that way after a while , especially if you listen to a lot of Coltrane and people who really developed that part of the language . ’ |
12 | The European Commission itself now recognises that principle . |
13 | Some managers may delegate the task of in-bureau tutor to an experienced advice worker , in which case they partially lose that person 's services as an interviewer . |
14 | The political forces which once made that movement move are now enveloped in a catastrophe that has two distinct dimensions . |
15 | As throughout the tour , Ashenden had observed the opportunist self-seekers at the front of the queue ( as ever ) for the room-keys ; and in the rear ( as ever ) the quieter , seemingly contented souls who perhaps knew that being first or last to their rooms would make little difference to the quality of their living . |
16 | and whilst , when I was in hospital I always had that feeling that I 'd love to hear the water lapping on a beach , you know and |
17 | A sign above the door proclaims it to be an ‘ Albergo-Osteria ’ , a hostelry or inn and within you find accommodation which perfectly suits that description being bohemian in both appearance and atmosphere . |
18 | Nevertheless , there are grounds for asking whether the measurable distribution of wealth-holding is simply a matter of choice within Britain in comparison with other leading economies , or whether the financial services sector forms the agency which actively determines that distribution rather than simply facilitating it . |
19 | Sit down , she said and the girls sat down thankfully feeling that the only lesson they really enjoy that weather would be swimming lesson . |
20 | My childhood was the place where , for my mother , the fairy tales failed , and through the glass of that childhood I now see that failure as part of a longer and more enduring one . |
21 | 3.30 Race : Only class horses win the Champion Hurdle and the pair which best fit that definition are the brothers Morley Street and Granville Again . |
22 | He has had the opportunity to reproduce 430 of the 500 drawings which originally constituted that collection and to mount a touring exhibition over three years : for the first , and probably only time therefore , they will all be seen together right across the world . |
23 | That morning they parted under the trees , he never took her all the way to the gates , that would only have made things worse , that morning she looked the way she always looked , rings under her eyes and her whole body braced for the ordeal that lay ahead , how hard it was to leave her always , maybe that was why they always drew the parting out , sometimes it took minutes , just the saying goodbye , they backed away from each other , then stopped and called something out , then backed away again , they called out special words that they 'd made up , words to fill the distance between them , words for the things they could n't say , they backed away till he was under the trees or she was through the gates , whichever happened first , she looked the same way she always looked that morning , except for one thing , she had a clock tucked under her arm , the clock they 'd found together , the clock that did n't tick , the lonely clock . |
24 | In my position you soon learn that football has only one certainty , that at the end of ninety minutes the final whistle blows unless there is extra time . |
25 | ‘ His work is about narcissism , but not the way we normally use that term , which is when someone is narcissistic , it means they 're self-involved . |
26 | I tell you what we 'll do , we 'll have a joint farewell party I Now take that look off your faces , Mr Misery and Miss Gloom , and go and collect the eggs for me , will you ? |
27 | I think it 's about time we actually put that word back into the dictionary and made it a good word to have . |
28 | Both have been designed to meet fully the requirements a set out by the County Council and we 're quite happy , we can actually meet that requirement of being one kilometre from Flaxton , in fact we greatly exceed that distance , despite and that is a on the design of a larger new settlement than fourteen hundred dwellings . |
29 | Everyone else thought the decisions had been made but in fact we totally re-did that season 's collection in a waiting room at Brussels airport , just the two of us . ’ |
30 | Under the terms of the Compromise , Member States were supposedly given the right to veto decisions affecting their vital national interests ; under the terms of this Maastricht Declaration they effectively renounce that right , thus giving to foreign policy at the outset the same status as that acquired by other areas of policy where the Compromise has gradually been eroded over many years . |