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

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1 So either we shall have to disallow such a possibility and decree that nothing qualifies as a genuine proposition unless its truth-value is fixed for all time , i.e. that all propositions are what is sometimes called " eternal " propositions , or we shall have to accept that truth-value is not an integral part of the objective propositional content .
2 One familiar view is that nothing qualifies as a genuine proper name unless it singles out its object in an unambiguous fashion , and that this task can be accomplished only by a logically simple symbol .
3 For this , we assume that nothing changes after the first T periods .
4 Just be prepared for Connemara enthusiasts to tell you that theirs is the only breed worth bothering about , Welsh Cob experts too insist that nothing compares with a good Section D and Highland/Fell/Dales etc exhibitors feel exactly the same !
5 The drawback is the cost of insisting that everyone goes for the same type of equipment .
6 The project outline claims that no-one lives in the inner zones , although this is disputed by local non-governmental organizations ( NGOs ) , which insist that tribal people currently use all of the forest .
7 Here I want to vary the times so that I hear from a true cross-section of our listeners , and those who listen to the graveyard shift , for instance , probably never hear the breakfast show .
8 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 .
9 This he did , and it was then that I experienced for the first time his unexpected propensity for one-liners , conjured out of thin air .
10 I never expected it to be easy , but I do sometimes wish for those moments that I experienced in the distant past , when the umpire used to say , ‘ game , set and match ’ , and you shook hands before entering the comparative safety of the changing room .
11 It was through them that I heard about the forthcoming penny farthing races at Ferrymead Historic Park , on Waitangi Day ( the NZ national day , Feb. 6th ) .
12 It was at a dinner party in the flat , when they were in the kitchen together fetching yogurt and raspberries , that I heard for the first time one of them turn on the other in anger .
13 It was one of the few references to the former prime minister 's gender that I heard during the whole week of leadership crise .
14 They were trying to insinuate that I belonged with the psychiatric patients .
15 I opened two bottles that I retrieved from the sticky mess on the cabin floor .
16 Also a photo of all the officers of Walsall that I saw in a second hand shop and I went and bought it for a few pence .
17 I 've lived on Skomer for six years now and before that I looked after a smaller seabird reserve on St Margaret 's Island .
18 And I believe it was then , looking on that view , that I began for the first time to adopt a frame of mind appropriate for the journey before me .
19 After you calmly tell me that I walked through a fucking wall ! ’
20 I have extracted a vast number of chocolates from automatic machines ; I have obtained cigarettes , toffee , scent , and other things that I dislike by the same machinery ; I have weighed myself with sublime results ; and this sense not only of the healthiness of popular things , but of their essential antiquity and permanence is still in possession of my mind .
21 I repeat a proposition that I made to a previous Leader of the House .
22 I reiterate the point that I made to the hon. Member for Greenock and Port Glasgow ( Dr. Godman ) .
23 The comparison that I made in The Independent newspaper was based on what the Secretary of State 's own review had recommended as the number required to run the system .
24 He laughed back when I told him that I came from a poor barrio in Britain and that we were no longer referred to as people either .
25 Dr Russell insisted that I went with the convalescent men and we were lucky to pick up one of the last trains to go northwards .
26 I began to despair in the local press I noticed an advert for an evening class , cookery for men being the young one in the family I plucked up courage and enrolled but it was great , with great apprehension that I went to the first class .
27 You may tell me that I went to the wrong place to begin with — and I can now agree .
28 Jo Spence I think it was then I was ill that I understood for the first time what it was to be a victim .
29 However , once we start to distort the operation of open justice and the consideration of the matters , we may very well , through the operation of rumour and all its insidious effects that are so damaging in libel cases — the only justification that I know for the high damages granted in such cases — inflict more damage on justice than we realise .
30 I should make it clear at the outset that I act as a parliamentary consultant to the Professional Association of Teachers and that much of what I shall say tonight will be based on the practical experience of PAT members .
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