Example sentences of "[unc] [noun] that [art] " in BNC.

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1 Both AT2 and AT3 thought that the Senior Management Team had been pleasantly surprised at what the review had revealed : that all the pupils liked Art and that classroom organisation was so efficient .
2 One of the reasons we 've got a very good language link is the language univer courses that the University did in the East in the European department , the Baltic Studies .
3 the actual cellars they 've got some of the old er writings that the , the monks and you 're not allowed to take photographs .
4 If you add that to the er problems that the government has created for this County , as with other County Councils , then the two things make it quite impossible for us to continue with a capital programme as we would like .
5 Er you say in your proof er Mrs that the site comprises two distinct parcels of land .
6 Clearly the riots and the er secrecy that the Home Office tried to surround those riots with , er show that we do have to have an ombudsman .
7 It would be very unfair to er Margaret that every time somebody called she 's got , she 's banished to the kitchen .
8 I do n't think I need to say anything further on the Council 's erm position on the new settlement erm or reiterate Hambledon 's earlier view that it 's n its er view that the settlement is not needed and can not be justified .
9 When faced with such happenings as those at Brent , and the perceived attitudes of avant garde librarians that the BL is the answer for every query for books beyond the current hit-list , the British Library , does , clearly , have a vital role to play .
10 The jury rejected the newspaper 's defence that the ordinary reasonable reader of the " News of the World " would not take the allegations of such a person seriously .
11 Granada 's defence that the words were not intended to refer to the plaintiff and would not have been so regarded by reasonable viewers was rejected by the jury , after hearing that the officer had received " unpleasant and damaging " comments afterwards .
12 That joint reading perhaps lies behind the appeal in Walahfrid 's prologue that the quest for wisdom be revived and widened " in modern times " .
13 The king 's concession that the cost of troops should fall on the rich and powerful rather than the poor of the community was insufficient to placate the commons , and in the October parliament of the same year they presented a petition entitled ‘ La demande de la Commune ’ in which they called for the abolition of the maltote , the punishment of purveyors who took prises without making payment , and pardon for debts .
14 The Environment Department said yesterday that Mr Patten could not agree with the inquiry inspector 's judgement that the needs of the historic house justified the introduction of unacceptable shopping developments in the countryside .
15 If it is difficult now to concur with the Bioscope reviewer 's judgement that the film ‘ surpasses in technical achievement anything of its kind ever made in Britain , and at times soars to heights of directorial brilliance ’ , it 's still possible to understand how an audience that had been accustomed only to silent films might warm to the various acts on display .
16 When a new and relevantly similar action occurs , one must either call it good or take back one 's judgement that the first one was good .
17 They brought , not another Bailén , but defeat after defeat , justifying Napoleon 's judgement that the Spanish regular army was the worst in Europe .
18 The court went on to record that the issues thus created had been narrowed by the acceptance on the part of the applicant 's counsel that the right of silence could not be invoked against the Director prior to the charge of the suspected person , and by counsel for the Director that if , as he submitted , the power to require information did not cease at the time of charge then it did not cease at all ( save in cases where the charge was not pursued ) until the investigation came to an end on the conviction or acquittal of the person charged .
19 Not even George Herbert 's counsel that the country-parson 's rage might here and there be justified had comforted .
20 In 1976 a consultant 's report ( the Fraenkel report ) supported the BWB 's case that the maintenance backlog was £38 million .
21 Do these figures prove the government 's case that the LDDC is good value for money ?
22 It does not help Fergie 's case that the financial expert who has been advising her about the settlement is the same man she has been cavorting with in the south of France .
23 We have seen that on 13 June the Court of Appeal had decided in Heaton 's case that the Transport and General Workers ' Union was not accountable for the action of its shop stewards .
24 Having quoted from Lord Diplock 's speech in Wright 's case that the figure must be " basically a conventional figure derived from experience and from awards in comparable cases " , Balcombe LJ continued :
25 It is the defendant 's case that the plaintiff was at all times , pushing to proceed as a matter of urgency on the deal .
26 But Commission officials conceded Britain 's case that the evidence linking big bikes to accidents was not convincing .
27 It must always have been a real hope on Wilfrid 's part that a king of Northumbria from another branch of the royal family or from a noble line claiming royal descent would be more favourably disposed towards him than the descendants of Oswiu .
28 While this demonstrates the public 's faith that the police can resolve any situation , the neighbourhood police are thereby presented with a dilemma : they either criminalize formally legal behaviour or disappoint public expectations .
29 At first sight , it seems arguable that the restrictions would meet this requirement following Megarry 's decision that no unlawful acts were committed .
30 It upheld the industrial tribunal 's decision that a man in comparable circumstances would also be dismissed .
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