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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ Yes , that money that I took to the taxi rank this morning .
2 Do you con will you continue that story that I listened to a week before cos I was n't here last week
3 It is with the greatest possible pleasure that I write to you once more , this time to confirm that your Company 's independence has been preserved after a battle which has lasted over nine months .
4 There are few prisoners that I know of , and a hundred people live there , including two or three who are official security guards .
5 Of course , over the years we 've campaigned , as I was telling someone only yesterday in another club that I go to at the church , that I said you know we , the Co-op Womens ' Guild , were helping to put water into Africa before any of this Band-aid and Live-aid was thought about .
6 It was while filming at this den that I heard of yet another place , only a few miles up the Wye , where mink had been seen killing mallard chicks .
7 Miss Honey , with one hand on the gate which she had not yet opened , turned to Matilda and said , ‘ A poet called Dylan Thomas once wrote some lines that I think of every time I walk up this path . ’
8 Testing is the same sort of thing but this brings out the different functions that I talked about either summations or or products .
9 That old boy that I spoke to , when his he was with his daughter , I said you give me my bloody keys and you money !
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 've got an interesting point that I relate about this job that when I went to see them , about starting this job , they said , Well , they never told me before I got in , they said er , We 've er we 've got no money so we ca n't pay you a very good wage , but er we 'll start you off with five pound a week , that 's all we can afford , well I was earning more than that , during the War , nineteen forty two .
12 It is with some reluctance that I have to strongly disagree with one of my fellow presidents , but some of the impressions that her article creates are very misleading and , in some cases , offensive .
13 It is at this point that I slip from my pedestal of polite insouciance .
14 " Alas , it 's not physical danger that I fear for him or rather , I fear that too , but since we are all in God 's hands I trust that He will not forsake us no , it 's another danger that I fear for him .
15 Dame Elaine Kellett-Bowman : May I inform my right Hon. Friend that I lunch in the cafeteria every day ?
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 The answer on this subject that I gave in November made it perfectly clear that the decision is mine and nobody else 's .
19 I pass on an interesting snippet that I read on a computer news net .
20 We somehow got on to the subject of detective stories , for it had been with some surprise that I learnt at the Old Parsonage meeting that at one time he had read them with avidity .
21 As to the type of employment the interesting feature that I experienced over the last two to three years as shown is that the inquiry level the type of inquiries has tended to focus on manufacturing and the attraction has been the quality of the work force , that is both in skill and its healthiness you know the liability and there are other issues in there too about where Britain is at these days in terms of immunisation wage levels , but it is the people that are themselves the major attractors so the potential work force in the locality that is the major attractor .
22 It was in this cave that I came across another example of Yorkshire wit : revealed in the light of a torch was a daubed inscription on the wall of the cave , ‘ J. CAESAR B.C. 44 ’ .
23 The bad news is the second difference from ordinary hydrogen that I alluded to , namely that whereas hydrogen is stable , muonic hydrogen is not .
24 The short brown gym tunic with its blue and gold woven girdle that I wore on my first day at Elmwood was a symbol of entry into a new world of lady-like refinement and academic elitism .
25 It was not till the following afternoon that I drove into Highburn .
26 It was with much regret that I learned of the sad passing of Jack Golder ( Shergold guitars ) on 9th April ‘ 92 , via the obituary published in your June issue .
27 The fixed positions that I saw with you
28 So I use the ordinary detergents that I keep in the cupboard for hand-washing and this works very well for me .
29 The first evidence of this surfaced on the second trip that I made to Rhodesia , in April 1971 .
30 In some ways that was the classic sound that I had with Whitesnake , but that sound was n't usable in later , more AOR versions of either that band or even other things that I 've done ; all you can say is that it was right for that particular music .
  Next page