Example sentences of "[noun] [v-ing] that [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 It was the sound of voices shouting that woke me the next morning .
2 But it must be close microphone placing that allows us to hear occasional breaths and vocalizing .
3 The clever colour theming that won our Chelsea Fujicolor garden a coveted Gold Medal , p18
4 Any cuckoo nestling that lost its hold , even momentarily , over its host would have died as a result .
5 Thirdly , they would need , in some sense , to be rational to have an effective means-ends reasoning that told them how to implement each desired goal .
6 But so far neither has shown the tremendous flair with top-spin attacking that made them a major force in the world championships in Dortmund only seven months ago .
7 That remi you 've C Cynthia saying that reminds me of the other thing that came out in feedback .
8 When this last measure failed to force some authorities sufficiently into line , the Conservative government , in 1984 , introduced a measure called rate capping that made it illegal for authorities designated by the Secretary of State to levy more than a certain amount in rates , their only form of independent finance .
9 Professional advisers who are members of drug and therapeutic committees can ensure that primary care concerns are heard and addressed and that they are informed of any changes in hospital prescribing that affect them .
10 One major pharmaceutical products company recently used our service to remove contaminated lint dust from the air conditioning ducting that served their production area .
11 A tingling that made her want to lift her feathers so the wind would touch her skin .
12 Many of the great fortunes in this country are still in the hands of the landed aristocracy who tend to be preoccupied with maintaining their great estates and country houses , no doubt feeling that opening them to the public is in itself a form of patronage .
13 But while the company 's management would not deny an element of luck , they would also point to a good deal of contingency planning that enabled them to react faster than anyone else to ILG 's collapse .
14 This time tomorrow it would be all over , and part of history ; the victors would be celebrating , the losers complaining that had it not been for this and that , they would have won , and the course of history would have been different .
15 It was the American biologist Garrett Hardin who first coined the highly apposite phrase ‘ fate 's lottery ’ for those capricious processes of gene shuffling that determine which of us shall inherit stretches of DNA coding for serious debility , which of us are bequeathed the determinants of mental disease , which of us will die young , and which of us will be able to avoid lung cancer despite a lifetime of heavy smoking .
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