Example sentences of "[that] [pron] [vb past] [prep] the [det] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Neither did he , for the moment , recognise her own diffidence as an indication that she felt in the same way about him .
2 Sabatini had sympathy for her , admitting that she went through the same ordeal before winning the US Open in 1990 .
3 I hope that future generations will never have to suffer the , and endure the noise that we did for the same purpose .
4 We hope to juxtapose paintings that they painted at the same site at the same time ’ .
5 As neighbours of the enormously powerful and expansionist United States , the Canadians had a direct and abiding interest in maintaining for their part the fiction that they belonged to the same political entity of the rich and powerful United Kingdom .
6 Mosasaurs , when not head-butting each other , were deep-diving sea hunters , and evidence of avascular necrosis in their bone structure hinted that they suffered in the same way as did human divers — they had frequent spells of the ‘ bends ’ .
7 Relatively little is known of the first great temples , which were built between 2000 and 1900 BC and destroyed by earthquakes in 1700 BC , except that they stood on the same sites as the later temples .
8 All we can reasonably conclude is that they happened at the same time .
9 It is thought that many of the jury became wealthy men , through bribes by both Blount and Dudley , so that they arrived at the same conclusion — a conclusion that ‘ After a searching enquiry , they could find no presumption of evil doing . ’
10 The leaf area/weight was as efficient in the sense that it took about the same time to detect comparable differences .
11 As for the residence requirement , despite the fact that it applied in the same way to British nationals , it constituted covert discrimination on grounds of nationality in so far as , by the very nature of things , nationals of other member states were less likely to be ‘ resident ’ in the United Kingdom than British citizens .
12 As Dulé had never heard his mother tongue , he and his new companions could only surmise , from the similar flare of their nostrils , the high broad set of their shoulders on slender frames , and the deep oval plunge of their chins on thin , round necks , that he came from the same part of the hinterland of West Africa , was of the Iqbo people in his origins .
13 Much of his youth was spent in Clermont , a city where the latter had been bishop , and his mentor there was Avitus , whose name indicates that he came from the same family as Sidonius 's father-in-law .
14 I think it 's just that he arrived at the same conclusions .
  Next page