Example sentences of "[noun pl] that [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We 're actually the only animals that smile and enjoy a good giggle .
2 This probably explains why little children favour tall animals , that they have never seen in reality , to animals that slither and scuffle across the ground .
3 Official figures do not usually include animals that escape or are released from the nets but have nevertheless been mortally wounded .
4 They were still doing jobs at that were long since dispensed with at you know , marshalling and that and methods that adopted and the shunting techniques .
5 It is foolish and unnatural to employ teaching methods that enforce and seem to advocate their quiet passivity .
6 Surely not that , she thought , my best doll , she 's got real hair and blue eyes that open and shut eyelashes and says Mama .
7 And then she heard the words that surprised and startled , confused her , so that the green eyes that flashed and sparked with anger softened and melted as she looked at him and heard each gently spoken syllable .
8 Blue , blue eyes that captured and held your glance .
9 Some local authorities still operate policy guidelines that recommend that children should stay in care for under two years ; at that stage , they should either be back home or adopted .
10 Add to that the new guidelines that suggest that all er plans for major developments must go through the hands of an A L O and really we do n't have an answer for it , and if we are going to be getting 9 new civilian C P O's they 're gon na have their work cut out learning their basic craft before they even develop their A L O skills .
11 The teams work to guidelines that ensure that their creations can work with those of their colleagues .
12 David Blunkett said it would ‘ reinforce worries that influence and control are slipping away ’ .
13 The insurers will not cover disputes that arose before the policy was taken out and will not meet legal costs incurred without their approval .
14 Despite the impossibility of an objective assessment , there are , however , considerations that suggest that the conflict has been exaggerated in the interests of scientism and secularism .
15 It 's best to bring an early morning , mid-flow sample with you , because the hormones that show that you are pregnant are most concentrated in your early-morning urine .
16 IN THE MENDIPS , A SHEEP FARMER IS STRUGGLING TO PROTECT HIS LAMBS FROM THE FOXES THAT WATCH AND PREY .
17 But the popular health system has provided a framework for addressing people 's health needs and finding solutions that validate and reaffirm their contribution to the health process .
18 Good planning gives you thinking time , the chance to anticipate problems and find ways of avoiding those stresses and crises that arise because you have n't enough time to deal with the unexpected .
19 New techniques and developments have taken place to give multi-exposure and animated holograms of subjects that change and move as the viewer looks around them .
20 And then the wailing that went up and the curses that fell as the roof came off .
21 There are many other books that offer that useful kind of advice and information , and I do n't intend to duplicate it .
22 In 1976 , Henry Blake published the first of a number of books that showed that he had studied the horse 's mind in depth .
23 That is , a DCS200 fitted with a 28mm ( normally wide-angle ) lens will produce images that look as though they have been shot on a 50mm ( standard ) lens .
24 So I 've got some weird tunings that give that kind of feel — kind of chromatic open tunings with very close intervals between the strings .
25 I have formally to decline such offers and shame on the correspondent who said that he had a pair of longjohns that flashed as he took them off and I was welcome to observe the spectacle at any time .
26 It is this feature of price/yield relationships that ensures that the nearer an instrument approaches maturity , the more liquid it becomes .
27 Words that flayed and scorched coming from her lips .
28 They can hinge on words that have more than one meaning or more than one usage , words that rhyme or sound similar , common thematic elements , or common symbolic associations .
29 ( b ) transform this information into a series of single words that simplify and summarise the historian 's argument , without also distorting it beyond recognition and recall .
30 They had all disappeared except for one of the bigger branches that bent and pointed a little his way and seemed now to come and go before his very eyes as drifting mist obscured it .
  Next page