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

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1 Yeah , I never though of that and I doubt if I get it now , all I think was well I know that I got it in the magazine rack
2 As my husband was then a consultant there , and involved in research in rheumatology , it was only natural that I joined him in the research field .
3 My point is that I see nothing in the Gracious Speech to enable me to counter the opinions expressed by our European partners who are still proud to know us but bemused that we have a Britain which in their eyes is no longer as great as it was .
4 ‘ I have to confess that I find nothing in the current stock of recent coursebooks to compare in originality or methodological advance with the vastly popular Headway series … ’
5 ‘ I have to confess that I find nothing in the current stock of recent coursebooks to compare in originality or methodological advance with the vastly popular Headway series … ’ — Coursebooks for the '90s , EFL Gazette
6 She had to make sure that she avoided him in the future and never gave him the chance to pull any more stunts like that !
7 How you going to know exactly where the boundaries go or i in between some land-lock countries that you got it in the right position
8 You will remember that we met him in the last commercial .
9 And who knows what may come of Labour 's long-overdue admission that we need someone in the cabinet specifically to fight our corner ?
10 He did not say what it was but it may be that we found it in the safe this morning .
11 But with the sales of that are going on , there are needs to move tenants around and make alterations to boundaries and buildings , as we split up holdings , so I would say Chair , it 's essential that we have something in the kitty to do this work , I mean , it 's obviously far exceeded by the capital receipts that the revue is generating .
12 We tend to view ourselves as physical beings only and to deny that we have anything in the way of a soul or spirit .
13 Right , colleagues , we 're now going to the Energy and Utilities debate and er I 'd like to propose that we do it in the following fashion .
14 We have to make certain that we fit you in the proper niche .
15 Rather , it is embodied in all the ISAs of capitalist society , so that we learn it in the course of learning what it is to be a parent , a democrat , a black , a steelworker , or a councillor .
16 Sometimes the king allowed subjects to take deer for themselves in his forests ; the warden 's duty was to see to it that they had a proper writ of warranty when they came to his forest , that they did not take more than the specified number , and that they took them in the prescribed manner .
17 Essentially , it was a calculative attitude and it was clear that they managed themselves in the sense that they saw work as being a means to their personal ends , which might be owning a boarding house , for example .
18 And I would be the last person to advocate that we follow the American practice of litigation er to the extremes that they pursue it in the States .
19 After all , ’ he threw at her , ‘ I 'm sure it was a mere oversight that they forgot you in the first place . ’
20 It 's not so much that they undersell themselves in the UK , but they have to really pull their fingers out in the US .
21 Another potential problem for patients is that they find themselves in the role of information-giver , and it is often information of a very personal nature .
22 That they have him in the Tower of London . ’
23 Fru Møller , who resented the embargo on her taste within the house , and frequently complained of the frustration she endured at having to maintain the past in all its detail , enjoyed the discipline the White Garden imposed , the contacts that it brought her in the gardening world , and the admiration its unusual beauty reflected upon her .
24 I feel that it shows itself in the contrast between the child 's — we 're talking about children for the moment , although obviously there are dyslexic adults — it shows itself in the contrast between the person 's ability to express him or herself in words and their ability to put it down on paper and to read it off paper , and it 's this contrast which often arouses one 's suspicions that there might be some problem and , having gone into it a little , we find that it stems from a failure of the sensory motor system — the brain is n't processing the information it 's receiving through the ear and eye .
25 That he wrote it in the winter of 1940 – 41 gave an indication of the insecurity which underlay his apparent aloofness .
26 If he proposes to say something new , I hope that , as the guardian of the interests of all parts of the House , you Mr. Speaker , will make representations to try to make sure that he does it in the House rather than just making a speech or holding a press conference , even if it is in Wales .
27 hinting that he had plenty in the bank .
28 But even if your romantic beau whispers ‘ I love you ’ daily in your shell-like , it does n't mean that he loves you in the way that you love him .
29 I have argued elsewhere that Pound was prepared to take instruction , as well as to give it ; that when he first came to London in 1908 , he was looking for masters to whom he might apprentice himself ; that he found them in the Irishman W.B. Yeats and the maverick Englishman Ford Madox Ford ( whose professionalism about writing still denies him in England the recognition that he gets abroad ) ; and ( so I have speculated , though I know it can not be proved ) that Pound sought the same relationship with another Englishman , Laurence Binyon , who was too cagey to go along with the idea .
30 There is , it seems , a strong possibility that he abandoned her in the West and took their baby son over to the Russian zone .
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