Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adv] that [pron] [verb] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Before leaving the topic of the twin-T filter , it is worth pointing out that it rejects at the frequency given by equation ( 8.33 ) no matter what the load . |
2 | She 'd been letting on that she lived in one of those posh houses . |
3 | It is usual to have the boards running so that you look down them as you enter the main door of the room . |
4 | Tottenham police are fond of saying publicly that they want to ‘ build bridges ’ with the community here . |
5 | Delaney scrambled to his feet , lurching from the effects of shock and concussion , knowing only that he had to be sure ; had to see it dead . |
6 | But Gabriel trudged on up the ladder , knowing only that he preferred to be with Izzie and her father than alone in the chapel with these stony figures against its walls , all staring with stony eyes , and all too lonely to touch one another . |
7 | We took his four- poster bed down that he wanted taking down that he cherished for some peculiar reason , and then we moved all the other bits of furniture , and as we w were sort of getting most of the furniture out of the first bedroom he said Do n't forget the loft will you ? |
8 | He even posed for the newspaper photographers , insisting only that they refrain from taking behind-the-bars type pictures . |
9 | She set the glass down on the table , her hand shaking so that it rattled against the ornate white-painted metal . |
10 | And what is the misogyny that they 're putting out that you talk about ? |
11 | The ICS , as a body , had never been much taken with political reform , sensing correctly that it set in motion a process whereby they could expect only to be replaced , and both reason and sentiment told them that this would never do . |
12 | Until the middle of the nineteenth century the whole of this load , equivalent to the weight of many railway trains , had to be carried by hemp ropes which were always shrinking and swelling , rotting and stretching so that it called for great skill to avoid the loss of some or all of the masts and spars . |