Example sentences of "that [noun] are [adv] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Gentlefolk of a quiet disposition should be aware that Girlschool are back with a new album and tour scheduled for the autumn .
2 In another publication , circulated by the D T I to foreign embassies , the government boasts and I quote , new labour laws have been introduced so that employers are now under no statutory obligation to recognize any union .
3 The fact that Middlesbrough are still in the competition is a bonus .
4 Officially it 's because there 's a Derwentside civic service the same day ; that Sunderland are also in the FA Cup semi-final is , of course , irrelevant .
5 A highly important corollary is that people are not under the domination of wyrd , which is why ‘ fate ’ is not a good translation of it .
6 It 's good to know that people are genuinely into the music ’
7 Some of the main areas are listed here , but the AOI stresses that staff are always at the end of the telephone to answer queries on a whole range of subjects .
8 He did not mention the point missed by the hon. Member for Dewsbury , that disconnections are now at a low level .
9 A major difficulty is likely to be that doctors are usually on the side of giving support rather than receiving it and will probably find it difficult to recognise their own needs .
10 The association and others criticise what I describe as independent inspectors , but we can reassure them in the Bill and elsewhere by showing how powerful HMI will be in ensuring that standards are up to the required level .
11 Now that exhibitions are over for the season , all they need is seed and water .
12 Earlier marriages with fewer children means that couples are together for a long time after their children have left home .
13 Very briefly , the basic Marxist argument is that the selective enforcement of the law , by largely ignoring white-collar/business crime , gives the impression that criminals are mainly from the working classes , which serves to direct attention away from ‘ ruling-class crime ’ .
14 I mean it is true that this is adults ' business , as it were , and that children are not in a position that they can take the sort of action that is going — certainly in the Gulf situation — to effect a change .
15 Mr Justice Hutchison said the 1936 Act primarily envisages a system where the local authority has a power and a duty to try to secure that premises are not in a state which constitutes a statutory nuisance .
16 They are opposed to the suggestion that women with young children should stay at home rather than go to work , accept that women are still at a disadvantage when it comes to advancement at work , but they do n't think there should be more positive discrimination in women 's favour .
17 One fact that contradicts it immediately is that women are often in the vanguard of linguistic change towards the standard variety .
18 After being attacked by a swan , Anne-Marie Booth reports in Paddlers World that swans are now on the increase following the banning of use of most lead weights by anglers .
19 Despite the fact that spiders are all over the place in Dostoevsky , not just in Svidrigailov 's dirty bathhouse vision of Eternity , and that urban potted plants go back to the beginning in Poor People , we are here firmly inside Crime and Punishment in its abandoned first-person narrative form ( ‘ I am on trial and will tell all ’ ) : Petersburg evenings and their hanging summer light , noises from below , happy workmen , blessed ‘ living life ’ elsewhere , a lonely man in pain passing through gates , over thresholds , slipping up and down staircases , the buzzing By of Raskolnikov 's dream and his awakening , intense time-consciousness alternating with time-oblivion .
20 Research suggests that fringe and Green Belt sites are generally used by local populations for informal recreation , and that facilities are not of a sufficient standard to attract people from far afield .
  Next page