Example sentences of "that [adv] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I gave the office details of Mr. Docherty 's next of kin — his mother in Hemsworth — and said that presumably any outstanding benefit should be paid to her . |
2 | New data indicated that altogether 404,000 sq km had been deforested . |
3 | A leading Soviet demographer estimated that altogether 9,400,000 peasants had died during Stalin 's collectivization programme in the early 1930s . |
4 | There were criticisms of the way that fundamentally different subjects , such as the humanities and the sciences , were to be treated in the same way . |
5 | The Foreign Office officials knew that fundamentally improved terms were not possible because the other member countries could not concede a privileged position to one member only . |
6 | There can be little doubt that economically inactive lone mothers would have been classified as unoccupied in the census , but so might other people . |
7 | The evidence on the extent to which actual index futures prices depart from the values predicted by the no-arbitrage condition generally supports the view that economically significant departures do exist . |
8 | Ensure that duly modified software has an updated issue number . |
9 | Unless such points are maintained , the analogy becomes so strained that little that is distinctive about natural selection remains . |
10 | Vickers ' analysis suggests that paradoxically this creation of new agencies to regulate such activities has actually increased the ability of government to intervene in certain areas of the economy . |
11 | This material will also bond well to stainless steel rods so that badly decayed timber can be drilled , stitched and glued to achieve higher strengths than the original construction . |
12 | It is certainly counter-intuitive to suggest that widely separated systems retain such a degree of influence upon each other . |
13 | And if it seemed surprising to reflect that the supremely versatile Hampshire trainer has not yet struck in our Classic races , it was even more incredible to learn from the man himself that Dead Certain 's victory in the richest two-year-olds race ever run in this country was his first success in a group one event . |
14 | This weakness left Egypt an easy prey for the rising Ottoman empire that seized the country in 1517 , making it then a province of Istanbul and that loosely structured empire that was to dominate the Middle East until 1918 . |
15 | This study provided us with an opportunity to identify some of the myths that predominantly unskilled workers hold about life in their work environment . |
16 | We have suggested that properly coordinated motility might be of crucial importance in promoting acid clearance , and could therefore be an unrecognised factor in the pathogenesis of duodenal ulceration . |
17 | It admits that remarkably few black students have passed through its school . |
18 | What lends this observation particular piquancy however is that remarkably few players sound particularly good . |
19 | Thus , both the Peace Tax Campaign in the UK , and the campaign to promote a World Peace Tax Fund Act in the USA adopted a primarily political strategy which was aimed at giving conscientious tax-resisters a statutory right of tax diversion , and at establishing appropriate machinery to make that right effective . |
20 | I hope that right hon. and hon. Members who wish to participate in this debate will have now had an opportunity to read the anniversary report in detail . |
21 | However , pulmonary arterial pressure increased to the pre-NO inhalation value with an increase in cardiac output when almitrine was given , suggesting that right ventricular function was not affected . |
22 | T. J. Clark for the defendant argued that the adequacy of consideration is not to be investigated ; that the defendant had a right to complain and that promising to forgo that right constituted good consideration . |
23 | What is less well-known is that rather similar effects may happen with a blow on the forehead which does not penetrate . |
24 | However , it is noticeable in a number of studies reviewed here that rather similar patterns are reported from studies undertaken in different locations . |
25 | She had scrumpled it up and tossed it into the wastepaper basket with an insouciant laugh … well , more of a furious scowl , actually , and then had had to put up with Helena asking whether Matthew Prescott was that rather super chap who had been featured in GQ a short while ago . |
26 | on page thirty one that rather grand building shown on the left hand side , is that ? |
27 | But if you read that rather strange , moving document , you will see very well what I mean , when I refer to Russell 's emotional difficulty in accepting what commended itself so strongly to his intellect , a purely naturalistic , scientific account of what things are . |
28 | However , as was recognised by Lord Greene MR in Hivac Ltd v Park Royal Scientific Instruments Ltd [ 1946 ] Ch 169 , " The practical difficulty in any given case is to find exactly how far that rather vague duty of fidelity extends " . |
29 | ‘ I also gather , ’ continued the Dean , glancing this time at Wheeler , ‘ that Gray may have known that rather odd set-up on the wherry where your man Caretaker lives . ’ |
30 | I find that rather surprising , considering that you appear to find bachelor status the answer . ’ |