Example sentences of "that they " in BNC.

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1 You are also asked to keep your church leaders informed of your involvement so that they can ensure you are adequately supported .
2 The need here is to convince people that they must change their behaviour .
3 Despite the publicity giving the facts surrounding the transmission of the disease , ignorance was such that they became afraid of normal social contact .
4 Despite the publicity giving the facts surrounding the transmission of the disease , ignorance was such that they became afraid of normal social interaction .
5 ACET works with partners , family , friends and other voluntary and statutory organisations to ensure that people get all the care they need in the way that they need it .
6 Despite the publicity on transmission of the disease , ignorance was such that they became afraid to even visit me .
7 And the prisoners themselves know that they are not alone , that the world has not forgotten them .
8 Tell the President that you have read about their case , that their trial was unfair — even the Appeal Court agrees on this — and ask that they are released immediately .
9 Ask that they are released immediately .
10 These men were taste-makers , whose judgements were important ; but the time available to them for writing was limited by the demands of negotiation and administration , so that they tended to write essays more than books , catalogue entries rather than articles .
11 How such as Donald Judd and Robert Smithson , was that they saw ‘ a false and pious rationality ’ as ‘ the enemy of art ’ .
12 The beauty and achievements of Bohemian art can perhaps be called Czech only with an effort , but there is no doubt of the attachment of a people to the heritage that they can rightly claim .
13 A final caution about using monographs about painters is that they can seldom be read alone .
14 However , if biographies of artists are carefully examined , it will be found that they do not necessarily contain much art criticism at all ; a biographer may prefer not to express personal views about the artist 's work ; a book 's main thrust may be to describe the artist 's own aims and ideas .
15 We know that with major sculptures such as The Burghers of Calais and the Balzac , Rodin did not claim that they were equally successful from all points of view .
16 Indeed , the assumption that they have characteristics in common may be mistaken or misleading .
17 The alternative , of choosing between artists , is also hazardous , since it refutes the idea that they have a reason for exhibiting together , even if what the critic writes is favourable .
18 At the end of the twentieth century group exhibitions perhaps do not have the importance that they have had earlier in the century .
19 Another consequence of the labelling of Impressionism and other groups by critics was that some artists naturally decided that they themselves could do the same job better than the critics .
20 But they are a reality which Naipaul treats in such a way that they , too , can at times seem phantasmagorical .
21 And perhaps we might imagine that they are the same but different .
22 In the days before glasnost — which his fictions may be thought to have rehearsed and predicted , but which could well mean that his fictions will no longer be for the West what they have been so far , when the thing that they deplore was still there in its entirety to be deplored — Kundera was forced into exile in the ‘ free world ’ of the time .
23 He says of the liberals that they were placed in a predicament by the fall : ‘ A democracy can not be imposed by force , the majority must favour it , yet the majority wanted what Khomeini wanted — an Islamic republic . ’
24 Not everyone who reads the book will be able to sympathise with Justin and Ursula , or to believe that they understand them .
25 So in earnest are they that they do n't even recognise that being in earnest is the act .
26 If you were to tell me that there are people , like the man upstairs to whom you now threaten to turn yourself in , who actually do have a strong sense of themselves , I would have to tell you that they are only impersonating people with a strong sense of themselves — to which you could correctly reply that since there is no way of proving whether I 'm right or not , this is a circular argument from which there is no escape .
27 The Special Squads were the Nazis ' ‘ most demonic crime ’ , representing ‘ an attempt to shift on to others — specifically the victims — the burden of guilt , so that they were deprived even of the solace of innocence ’ .
28 There is a danger in reading the classics , in that they can come to be regarded simply as literature — so always try to look at them as plays for performance — and , it goes without saying , try to see as much theatre as you can .
29 And one of the main advantages of these very compressed and arduous courses is that they give students approaching drama school entry an opportunity of seeing what will be required of them should they gain a place at drama school .
30 The point is that they are all vital young men with love on their minds , full of colourful words to express their feelings , and all are within the range of the eighteen to twenty-five year old student actor .
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