Example sentences of "that [vb base] [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | In America , companies that launch underwritten secondary issues see their share price fall further than those which choose book-building , reckons Morgan Stanley ( though firms that seek underwriting may be in worse shape anyway ) . |
2 | To resolve the problem that most organisations have multiple networks that communicate using different network protocols , the multiprotocol networking software in Oracle7 is designed to enable any client computer to communicate with any server or group of server computers in the network , regardless of network protocol . |
3 | Nerves that communicate using noradrenaline are adrenergic . |
4 | It may be the song of the curlew that recalls childhood holidays on the moors and dales , the calls of oystercatchers that bring to mind the seaside , the smell of the salt , the sunshine and ice cream ; or the song of the thrush that brings back the memory of a walk , a place , a friend who shared a memorable day . |
5 | In 1928 he had found , when attempting to sell BIP films to the US , that the doors were ‘ barred in the faces of UK producers ’ , and the excitement that Blackmail caused at home was not matched in the US . |
6 | One of the things that distinguish teaching as a profession is the extent to which people 's implicit personal philosophies are constantly and necessarily relevant to their professional impact . |
7 | Again , environments that make exercising entertaining can be employed , perhaps including some competitive element such as a game or simply a timed response system . |
8 | This suggests that make expresses antecedent causation , since it evokes a process of causation giving rise to a state of affairs that comes into being only at the end of the process . |
9 | Sixty seven jobs will be lost with the amalgamation of two factories that make mining engineering equipment . |
10 | Rosie Dean is just one example among many of the specialists that make buying furniture in Yorkshire a rewarding experience . |
11 | You 'll learn the ingenious techniques that make mouthwatering food nutritious . |
12 | Certainly we need road space for those who must drive , but there are many drivers who would willingly change ( or revert ) to public transport given some inducement — like services that are more frequent , more reliable and more widely available , or a further disincentive to the scandal of non-essential company cars that make commuting free of charge to their users . |
13 | AS YOU yawn through this week 's promo-treadmill that is Wogan and wonder why Parkinson went to Australia , imagine , if you will , an interview programme with one guest , a shot of the interviewer 's back only , no stairs and the sort of questions that make grown men break down and cry . |
14 | Nevertheless , it is his questions , his ways of telling and , for want of a better phrase , his search in life that make Lepage the avant-garde artist he is . |
15 | Inhaling very cold air may cause local freezing in air passages and lungs , or spasms similar to asthma that make breathing difficult . |
16 | It also tells you about the communications and equipment that make working from home possible . |
17 | Where winter snow is plentiful , ponds and shallow lakes occupy large areas ; over much of the tundra they form networks of static waterways that make walking difficult after the thaw . |
18 | I 'm wearing a black figure-hugging knee-length frock , which has been hand-embroidered all over with dangling jet beads ; sharp , dangling jet beads that make standing up imperative . |
19 | To do this you will need a sturdy roof-rack that attaches to the guttering of the car , and , rather than relying on your knot-tying ability , you can buy special straps that make securing the board , mast and boom far easier . |
20 | He wants continued support for all the existing research units that evaluate screening programmes , and for careful assessments of the long-term outcomes of screening on the population . |
21 | It is the conjunction of travel time , costs and opening hours ( availability ) of services that combine to render rural residents more or less isolated or inaccessible , and this question of poor spatial and temporal synchronization of services and public transport ( in particular ) will be developed in chapter 8 . |
22 | Most practitioners undertake reviews of procedures at some time or other , whether they are procedures in the commonly accepted sense of the term , ie low-level processes or activities with a set order of steps ( Collins Standard Reference Dictionary ) , or the total activities of an organisation that combine to achieve the purpose of the business as a whole . |
23 | They remain the orientations that converge to form the predominant element of the British political culture . |
24 | But they do n't seem to have some of these sort of inherent problems that other cars have had since , with eh , sections of the body that tend to rust . |
25 | This is in itself unremarkable and can be explained if , of the two types , the carbon-free granulites have a higher porosity , a weaker matrix or a greater proportion of long thin cracks that tend to close on application of small confining pressures . |
26 | Therefore , in this variant , the politician will indulge in promoting regulatory activities that tend to do this ; the MP of a farming constituency promotes tighter regulations on imported meat and so on . |
27 | In shaded or damp areas that tend to collect a slippery coating of algae , paving and steps should always be cleaned regularly . |
28 | Barclay ( 1978 ) argues that the existence of surplus profits in the financial services industry will attract new entrants , and that it is the influx of new entrants that tend to cause problems for regulators . |
29 | I 'm sure you 've got one of these really strange chest infections , and these are the ones that tend to hit young , healthy , fit , young adults . |
30 | As against this view , however , Jensen and Murphy suggest with some plausibility that ‘ there are strong political and organizational forces that tend to define success in dimensions other than shareholder wealth and exert pressures for actions that reduce firm value . |