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

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1 You 'll enjoy the advantages of Britain 's most local and convenient stores with opening hours that suit you and a huge range of all the products you 'll need .
2 Steven continues : ‘ There 's a complete balancing out of all the different musical influences which enables us to write songs that make us sound like no-one else .
3 They want ties that link them more to each other — through mutual defence pacts — and to the West , if it can be done without infuriating the Soviet Union .
4 EVERY version of Educating Rita has ingredients that set it apart from all others .
5 While there are many circumstances in which that is true , it seems important to acknowledge that the political system contains biases that make it much easier for some groups to secure influence than others .
6 And fax machines that enable you to send and receive pages of information anywhere in the world — in seconds .
7 I do n't think humans want to know things that disturb them . ’
8 He says dozens of children are injured in accidents on the inflatable castles , and he wants firms that hire them out to be licenced .
9 Some of the culture-based arguments clearly have political ingredients , but one strictly political argument , or rather political-system argument , is equally applicable to any new political movement ( whether left , right or centrist ) seeking long-term viability — that the British first-past-the-post electoral system has features that make it extremely difficult for a new party to ‘ break through ’ .
10 of old exploding suns that makes you feel
11 In addition , despite a disarmingly pleasant manner , Reagan was widely considered to harbour views that placed him outside the mainstream of American politics ; there was a possibility that he might tamper with social security or lead his country into war .
12 The powerful have a way of establishing contracts that suit them .
13 Imagine , if you will , one Aztec priest arguing with another in the year 1452 : ‘ I have made calculations that indicate it is nearly impossible for intelligent beings to exist in this hypothetical world you call Europe .
14 Does education prepare people to be objects of learning and to accept their place within the status quo , or does it encourage people to question the critical issues of the day and challenge forces that keep them passive ?
15 We have all seen clouds that reminded us of something — a sea horse , say , or a smiling face .
16 We tried to help Shanti to be pleased with her colour , to choose clothes that suited her , and to be co-operative with her over make-up and hair styles .
17 Nutty said icily , ‘ Not everyone can afford made horses that do it without any effort on the part of the rider , like yours .
18 We have begun to measure these trees , noting characteristics that give us clues to their genetic relationships : these trees , growing under plantation conditions , will eventually tell us whether we really have collected new genes useful to farmers who grow cocoa .
19 The wind coursed over it and flapped it — little whip noises that stirred it and made it seem alive , the dog-face scowling .
20 Owls ' eyesight is good in dim light but not so good in total darkness ; it is their acute hearing and the accuracy with which they can pinpoint sounds that make them such successful hunters .
21 They read publications that keep them abreast of market trends , personalities , lawsuits and prices — rather than delving into art history as do their counterparts in Europe .
22 It was knowing that surgery could work miracles that helped him overcome fears about the daunting operation .
23 In one of those disarming quotes that make him both loathsome and likeable , he once said ‘ I 've been in more courts than Bjorn Borg . ’
24 ‘ I do n't like novels that tell you about things . ’
25 Nature has produced stones that show us what the earth 's magnetic field has looked like for millions of years .
26 It is not only knitting machines that do it .
27 Then , by putting my ear to the handle , I hear sounds that tell me whether or not the blade is close to either rabbit or ferret .
28 I mean you very rarely get things that close you see .
29 And once you make the joke , and I always tell jokes that make them laugh .
30 With Matthew clutching at her apron , Ann , who was servant as well as mistress in her house , bustled to open the door , while Jill peered cautiously round the kitchen door and Nathan began making those deep crooning noises that indicated he was becoming excited .
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