Example sentences of "a [noun] that [pron] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 because where all the sort of a route that I reckon I know I , I am not gon na know it all .
2 It was a decision that she knew she had been putting off for far too long .
3 Now children am I right in thinking that when Mrs came in and took some lessons with you when I was on a course that she taught you how to count up to thirty ?
4 I started — and still do — in a field that I call my Chagall field because Chagall once painted one exactly like it .
5 There is a story that they bet him a substantial sum that he could not read a certain number of books of the Bible without talking .
6 Thresher manager David Newton and assistant John Onanuga are suspended on full pay for ‘ inventing ’ a story that they sold him Champagne at £15.49 and Raffles cigarettes at £1.98 .
7 They missed a few kicks at goal but they nailed Northampton to their line and worked up such a storm that they had them scurrying all ways .
8 ‘ It is a coincidence that they announced it on the eve of my press conference , ’ he admitted .
9 The courtly interpreter of the festival , a Tunisian , after giving him some hashish jam , said to him in a tent that he hoped he had peace of mind .
10 Recording a verdict that he killed himself by an overdose Liverpool coroner Roy Barter said : ‘ He had been complaining of anxiety and obviously felt vulnerable before Christmas . ’
11 The jury returned a verdict that he killed himself .
12 Recording a verdict that she killed herself , Mr. Williams said : ‘ She was an affectionate girl , and a girl who needed affection .
13 He recorded a verdict that she killed herself .
14 South-West Durham Coroner Colin Penna recorded a verdict that she took her own life .
15 I was n't sure if this was a reproach that he deserted her the rest of the year .
16 [ reading ] " I always thought my young master a fine gentleman as everybody says he is , but he gave these good things to us with such a graciousness that I thought he looked like an angel . "
17 It is as a stranger that I greet my own self , and see it as an unknown fellow traveller through time .
18 ‘ A principle I have always applied in the property business is that you put in a bid that you think something is worth , and you do n't go above it . ’
19 She is so slowed down by the dope slamming fifty visions of hell at her a second that she finds it hard to fight , hard to believe in her own anger , hard to believe in what she 's doing .
20 The sea was such a mess that it took him a few moments to be sure of the reef .
21 I , I take My Noble Friend 's point indeed , but I think nonetheless er that er I have to say that there is a degree that we put it this way of understanding of how the process works rather more informally than the manner in which my Noble Friend has put it .
22 Believing his benefactor to be Miss Havisham , he nourishes a fantasy that she intends him to marry Estella , whom he continues to love passionately , ‘ against reason , against promise , against peace , against hope , against happiness , against all discouragement there could be ’ .
23 Ooh that 's a shame that you missed her , bloody hell .
24 Could it be that what he was feeling was a kind of envy , in the sense that he 'd brought her here , to a place that he felt he 'd made his own , and in a matter of weeks she 'd already grown closer to it than he could ever hope to be ?
25 To constitute an offence under those sections the waste must have been deposited on an unlicensed site or in breach of the conditions in the licence , must amount to an ‘ environmental hazard ’ and must have been deposited in such circumstances or for such a period that whoever deposited it there may reasonably be assumed to have abandoned it there or to have brought it there for the purpose of its being disposed as waste .
26 The hand under hers clenched on the settee cushion , his face went red , and his eyes flashed such vindictive rage for a moment that she thought he would hit her , then he controlled himself , sitting silently by her on the settee , until she felt his hand gradually relax .
27 It 's a job that they need somebody to do , they could n't just
28 And of course that was why Hardy had taken against him , why he had left him on the sidelines any time he picked a team for some action , why he had now given him a job that he knew anyone else in the unit would have balked at .
29 So much is at stake when you start a job that you owe it to yourself to think all the implications through .
30 You , who wanted me to enter you on the same night , with the same sound still in my head , a sound that I knew I had somehow , somewhere , heard before .
  Next page