Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] that [pron] [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 Rose and Adams , in Langley 's collection , wrongly see this as some form of limitation : ‘ Possibly the greatest difficulty that we have in furthering our understanding of pain and suffering in other animals is the limitation of the human model ’ ( 1989 : 63 ) .
2 You can take that tin that you got in er you can take that tin as a pencil case that you got pardon ?
3 Well being Milton , and being very thorough , he gives us long lists , of course , of dozens of possible subjects that he had in mind , but he seems to have taken the King Arthur story very seriously .
4 Empowering local communities , that 's what really frightens the Tories , because what it means is they 'll never be able to come back with those repressive and regressive policies that they brought in two years ago .
5 The following example combines the principle of peak load pricing with the idea of a two-part tariff that we introduced in Section 17–4 .
6 It was then that I conceived the idea of getting a few fans that he had in those days to walk around the television company with placards saying Lets Be Fair To The Long Hairs , which did get press publicity , and in the end , the producer relented and he did his first TV show . ’
7 We had a thing what we called a hay-strewer ; and we had an old horse that we put in this hay-strewer .
8 Now , so we have n't got the reason for you gaining this skill that you had in the case of making scones , playing the clarinet .
9 He puts down something like eight guitar tracks using numerous WEM Copicats and what have you , and it 's only when you hear them all together that you realise he 's assembled this sound that he had in his head .
10 Furthermore , bearing in mind the reservations about changes in different varieties that I expressed in section 5.2 above , the early date suggested here for the loss of the velar fricative does not affect the fact that there are dialects of English ( in Lowland Scotland ) which have not yet lost the fricative .
11 I think he might have tried , thinking that he must fulfill this sexual desire that he had in some way .
12 Dame Elaine Kellett-Bowman : May I inform my right Hon. Friend that I lunch in the cafeteria every day ?
13 Indeed , there is some evidence that they occur in creatures without proper nervous systems at all — even paramoecium .
14 Remember also that few other countries have the same level of free health care and social welfare that we have in Britain .
15 After tea that day they all gathered in the kitchen and Mum brought out two great big bags full of dry brown stuff that she bought in the flower shop .
16 This is an interesting game that I discovered in the United States .
17 Britain 's membership of it has already done the untold harm to the British economy that I described in Chapter 5 ; the quicker the Government decides to abandon the objective of re-entering the ERM and to take back permanent control of the economy the better .
18 One factor in this is our exporting the very successful Bridal Collection that we developed in the U K , we 've exported that to Canada and the U S and that 's gone down very well indeed .
19 The editorial policy that he pursued in Monde was ultimately no doubt as much a product of his natural inclination for popular front co-operative politics , as it was a consequence of his scepticism regarding the possibilities for the development of proletarian literature in interwar capitalist France dominated by a hegemonic bourgeois cultural tradition .
20 The answer on this subject that I gave in November made it perfectly clear that the decision is mine and nobody else 's .
21 Just because we have , a so called civilized nation that we live in that destroys the world , that destroys animals that destroys the environment we 're living in !
22 It appears that Thomas has head lice and I enclose some information that we have in school relating to this .
23 Mind you it was only their wages are only comparable to say some wages that they get in nuclear power station .
24 These have been loosely termed ‘ universalist ’ theories of language , since the basic tenet is that there are universal structures of grammar and especially of syntax , in which all people have ‘ competence ’ and which underlie and make possible the different utterances that we observe in the actual practice of language .
25 Horace may or may not have believed in the divinities and demi-gods he poetically invokes ( he often deals whimsically with them , and he describes himself as — not much of a churchgoer ) but they were at the very least a cultural property that he held in common with his audience ; he could assume that his readers — represented by Torquatus — would take the point if , in developing a theme , he reminded them of a name out of history or legend .
26 Eventually they are turned to stone , but they retain not only the outward shape that they had in life , albeit sometimes distorted , but on occasion even their detailed cellular structure is preserved so that you can look at sections of them through the microscope and plot the shape of the blood vessels and the nerves that once surrounded them .
27 For example , it is not enough to talk simply in terms of the 103 ; the 103.2 , which formed part of a British system that we recommended in August 1985 was a completely different design from the present 103/4 .
28 In 1928 William Robson published Justice and Administrative Law , a landmark text which he later described as an attempt ‘ to dispel the illusion held by all the leading lawyers , politicians , civil servants and academics who had been brought up on Dicey 's Law of the Constitution that in Britain there was no administrative law ’ In this book Robson argued that ‘ no modern student of law or political science has today the slightest doubt that there exists in England a vast body of administrative law ’ and that ‘ the problem is not to discover it but rather to master its widespread ramifications and reduce it to some kind of order and coherence ’ .
29 What he wanted to do was to publicize erm the whole issue , and it was for this purpose that he joined in these campaigns .
30 The theoretical tools that we developed in the preceding Lecture have been shown to be extremely versatile ; they enabled us to analyse easily the incidence of taxation in a variety of economies exhibiting different kinds of imperfections .
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