Example sentences of "[verb] [to-vb] that [prep] " in BNC.

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1 So no , so we got to find that off Simon now , who he sold the bike to .
2 Regular staff , sometimes nominally of the same grade , provide a sort of supervision for them in the initial period and themselves tend to find that during the peak period they are doing , or doing more consistently , more responsible jobs than during the rest of the year .
3 The hon. Gentleman will want to know that during the past two years personal social services standard spending will have increased by nearly 33 per cent .
4 Therefore , in looking at this diagram , one needs to realize that to the southwest er and just east of er Strensall erm the area is filled up by greenbelt .
5 The ‘ Pater Nostra ’ organisation , which will care for physically and mentally handicapped people in Atea , expect to find that by owning their own tractor they will not only go a long way to becoming self-sufficient but will be able to hire out the tractor locally to enhance their income .
6 Although I am convinced that the prime management problem is ‘ making it happen ’ , one has to accept that in life there is always at least an evens chance that one is going the wrong way .
7 Therefore you will need to rewrite that in a way which mean something to modern erm , readers .
8 For it has come to pass that through marriage certain feelings are communicated by the partners to each other and , more important , to society at large .
9 I want to answer that by looking at what I call ‘ The Proper Purgatory . ’
10 The first declaration he gave to Pineau to take back to France would almost certainly have disappointed resisters : its denunciation of the Third Republic was a little too sweeping for Pineau 's taste ( one has to remember that by this stage the bitter experience of Vichyism and Nazism was beginning to rehabilitate the reputation of republicanism in France ) , and it had almost nothing to say about social or economic reform .
11 In order to understand what you would see if you were watching a star collapse to form a black hole , one has to remember that in the theory of relativity there is no absolute time .
12 ‘ I want to hear that from Garry , and I intend to see him , with or without your co-operation . ’
13 Evelyn and the others are , indeed , with greater or lesser urgency and awareness , immobile in desperation , but I want to suggest that for Joyce it is not the dispassionate artist 's gaze which alone allows that strange steadiness commentators have called and even tone .
14 I shall be looking more closely at the implications of this point of view later , but here I want to suggest that in emphasising the importance of reflection Dorothy Heathcote has overstated the case .
15 If we tried to extend that to all Labour Members rather than to ex-leaders , we would have to debate the issue all week to tempt them to their feet .
16 He sees too that the other should from the first have known better , as he himself should ( he has come to understand that in retrospect ) , and therefore judges that they both made not only an unlucky but a bad choice .
17 As soon as someone gives you ten to the minus eight , you can say , Well if I want to convert that into real money ,
18 During those two years , I have also come to believe that with the help of two powerful tools we can turn people on to the quality process .
19 For example , Vivian de Sola Pinto ( a regular contributor to the Review during the 19305 ) had come to consider that in the post-war world liberally-educated persons , whether schoolmasters , civil servants , or business administrators should have the capacity to contribute to the revitalization of a " soulless bureaucracy " , and that the main object of English studies should therefore be " the provision of a truly liberal education " for such " non-specialists " .
20 I want to emphasize that in my discussion of social differentiation I am not dealing with an ‘ underclass ’ in the sense in which that term has recently been employed by , among others , Dahrendorf ( 1987 ) .
21 He wants to argue that we do join civil societies and that we can under certain circumstances erm decide to quit them and , overall of course against Filmer he wants to argue that in this respect a civil society is radically different from the family .
22 The snag was , everything had seemed perfectly fine and reasonable written down in black and white — but the book had omitted to mention that on snow the skis took on a life all of their own .
23 Solicitors ' firms large and small have come to realise that at a time when competition is intense and growth is seen as essential in order to meet increased overheads and maintain profit levels ( let alone to increase them ) any policy which irrevocably rules out fundamental reorganisation of their practices is likely to prove short-sighted .
24 But even Butler has come to realise that in fulfilling the role of gamekeeper turned poacher he might not win friends but he could influence people .
25 It stands to reason that in such vast space there must be some other beings .
26 Has not he forgotten to mention that between 1979 and 1981 investment fell sharply and that it was lower in the third quarter of 1991 than in any other quarter — 12 per cent .
27 If the Timex worker wants to regard that as a right of reply to Neil 's speech , so be it .
28 Right , it 's forty five over sixty , you want to change that into a decimal , what do you do ?
29 You divide the top number by the bottom number , so , supposing you 've got fifty seven minutes and you want to change that into a decimal of an hour , what fraction of an hour is it ?
30 You want to check that on the calculator , see if that one works ?
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