Example sentences of "[adv prt] of that [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If you knew some of the goings on of that lot in high places . ’
2 You 'd recognize this if you are a driver and especially a driver who maybe has the opportunity of travelling long distance , now years ago when I was younger and perhaps some of you in the audience when you were younger , you could go from here to the South of England with no trouble , without a break and you 'd head on down the motorway and you , you 'd be alert and alive and er ready to meet up with all sorts of emergencies and you 'd drive quite well all the way down , non stop down the South of England , but if you 're like me now , when I get to Stafford on the motorway you 're beginning to feel as if you 've had enough and it 's difficult to try and keep your concentration as you used to years ago , and that 's how it can be in the truth sometimes , when we 've been with it a long time that , we grow older not only physically , but spiritually too we become very experienced in the truth and we become very sort of fat spiritually , we can live off of that fat ca n't we ?
3 Wheeler did not add that for a man whose chief pleasure in the past seemed to have been in giving other people orders , a falling off of that activity boded ill .
4 Right now so the tap is to control the speed at which the acid goes in and if there is any gas that 's in there it ca n't escape out of that pipe again it 's got to go down the other pipe .
5 If it can fall down out of that pipe into the jar it must be ?
6 And with Leonard ruled out of that Wembley clash , Hynes could claim his place today .
7 So out of that stalemate negotiations have begun and they 've gone on for three years .
8 Erm , now we 've got quite a lot out of that opening , so let's look at the rest of the first stanza .
9 My point is not that we might count the relations between parts as themselves parts — though this is not necessarily mistaken — but that the relations into which the parts enter in making up the whole affect their character and value so that they do not necessarily have the same value as they would have had out of that whole .
10 Maybe ‘ I did n't vote Tory ’ , but even that does not enable me to opt out of that responsibility entirely .
11 Er the speed they come out of that bend is unbelievable and I speak from experience Madam Chairman because my daughter lives on that very corner where the bend is and er
12 That panelling though that you took out of that hall was beautiful .
13 You must get out of that hotel and come and stay with us …
14 More than that , the abandonment of syllabic metre means losing the principal stylistic character , the distinctive " key " of the Odes , for it is in metrical subtlety that Horace finds , and recommends to his reader , what Yeats has called " the fascination of what 's difficult " ; and it is out of that difficulty that the delicate , devious style of these lyrics uniquely flowers .
15 The routine was the same , and Fielding had them in and out of that door like a chainline vaccinator .
16 If you were n't blackmailing me with that threat to set the press on me , then I 'd be out of that door in half a second flat ! ’
17 ‘ Just try walking out of that door with the intention of hitch-hiking and see where it gets you ! ’
18 For he was acutely aware that Ubaldo Valesio had waited in that bar , used that phone , and then walked out of that door , got into his car and never come back .
19 Madam , if my colleague were not bound by the traditions of the Civil Service — not to mention the obsolescent demands of gentlemanliness and his own natural diffidence — he would walk straight out of that door and never come back .
20 People who go out of that door have committed themselves to a date .
21 And I I think that it it it would just grow out of that kind of activity and then eventually when ploughing matches er , as such , in the you know , in the adult farm , with horses , became the great thing er which was the second half of the last century , you know after the farming revolution .
22 And Apple ( the name was inspired by a Magritte painting that McCartney had recently acquired ) was born out of that sense that the Beatles had to start taking responsibility for their world instead of being acted upon by a panoply of ‘ men in grey suits ’ .
23 This is to counter the transfer of assets through a newly acquired ‘ surplus ACT ’ company under the no gain/no loss rule in s 171 , TCGA 1992 , which are then sold out of that company , thus eliminating or reducing the taxable gain ( s 245B ) .
24 I watched it for a day or two , then they sent me out of that part of the house , because they knew I was watching what went on .
25 THOMAS PENNANT in his " Tour in Scotland " 1772 writes , " A present was made me of a clach clun ceilach , or cock-knee stone , believed to be obtained out of that part of the bird ; but I have unluckily forgotten its virtues .
26 THOMAS PENNANT in his " Tour in Scotland " 1772 writes , " A present was made me of a clach clun ceilach , or cock-knee stone , believed to be obtained out of that part of the bird ; but I have unluckily forgotten its virtues .
27 The British party indeed congratulated itself on having fought to keep such matters as foreign and social policy out of that part of the text which in its view constituted the ‘ genuine ’ amendments to the Treaty of Rome .
28 The defendants were negligent in breach of duty of not carrying out of that part of that duty .
29 I knitted myself a dress from that which started off fawn , but we ran out of that colour and I had to finish it off in blue .
30 They 'll be out of that wood very soon . ’
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