Example sentences of "[adv] [art] [noun] [that] [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | Presumably the Soviets that argued that these protesters should n't be there in the first place and they have the right to apprehend them if , if they want to ? |
2 | There is a problem about investigating the first of these hypotheses in that the dreams that are remembered are presumably the ones that have more logical structure . |
3 | First-preference votes are presumably the votes that have been most seriously considered . |
4 | ‘ But we believe we will get this 90 percent right the thought that has gone into it has been enormous . ’ |
5 | Mr Snowden was released by firemen just before 8 am and police opened one lane of the eastbound A45 around 10 am purely to help clear the tailbacks that had built up . |
6 | He understood instinctively the nature that deals in extremes . |
7 | ‘ It 's what you put on the inside that counts , not what you do to the outside , ’ he said . |
8 | Bores Hole was used as an air raid shelter , or rather the tunnel that led under the road was , and many tales could be told of nights spent under there during the air raids . |
9 | And suddenly the emotions that went tearing through her were so terrifying , so cataclysmic , that she had to thrust them from her . |
10 | Suddenly the passion that drove him reached her also . |
11 | like well apparently the fella that 's done it , for years , and years , for years , for years has had a |
12 | ‘ It was basically the novel that made it necessary for me to look into the Bible . |
13 | Much depends on the nature of the training provided , especially the ethos that guides it ; that is , whether it is organization- and profession-centred on the one hand or client- and community-oriented on the other and the degree of commitment on the part of professionals to recognize and affirm the value of indigenous factors and to capitalize upon them . |
14 | Empson was not a scholar , and hardly wished to be one , though he respected scholarship — especially the kind that had once produced the Oxford English Dictionary to provide others with a godsent place to start a critical argument . |
15 | He wrote a letter to his friend and former pupil Benedetto Castelli in which he discussed the Bible , especially the passage that stated that Joshua had commanded the Sun to stand still , a fact that would have proved that the Sun must previously have been moving , as Aristotle and Ptolemy had said . |
16 | But he 's been keeping the opticians in business — especially the ones that stock really old-fashioned frames — ever since we were at school together . |
17 | Unhappily the difficulty that besets the establishment of such a society as that contemplated by the Sunderland men is the same as that which practically neutralises the efforts of the existing small unions . |
18 | The backbone of France is naturally the squad that toured Argentina . |
19 | The Beverley Sisters classic ‘ Sisters ’ was naturally enough the song that introduced their voices to the world . |
20 | just , but that was n't good enough the bloke that wrote in he says oh later on , er even the filter is no good |
21 | Melissa closed her eyes and gnawed her thumb as she struggled to nail down the clue that fluttered moth-like in her memory . |
22 | The events were over , but their impact shook Europe that year and echoed down the decade that followed . |
23 | He 's so thick , you know he 'll say right I 'll go down the hold , I 'll do the humping , what they call humping , he 'll do that , loading these slings or bags , rather than him standing there and say well ten bags in that sling , put ten down , he could n't do that , so he 'd rather go down the hold that 's happened . |
24 | He pulled down the wires that had let Jekub taste the electricity . |
25 | Willie Bond , the postman , was pushing his bicycle along the road to Nidden , at the end of his last delivery , and in the distance the rector could see Ella vanishing down the alley that led to Lulling Woods and Dotty Harmer 's house . |
26 | The evidence that there had been an intruder was slight but all the same his senses tingled as he walked quietly through the hall , past the staircase and down the passage that led to Jacob 's bed-sitter . |
27 | The actors try improvising the scene two or three times while I scribble down the lines that sound good . |
28 | ‘ He put down the money that had been initially agreed upon . |
29 | They slapped their way hastily along the wet pavements , into the main road , up one block and down the side-road that flanked the cinema . |
30 | We will continue our efforts to break down the barriers that prevent them from competing freely throughout Europe and in the wider world . |