Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [verb] [noun pl] that " in BNC.

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1 If you are making the set of pictures as a gift , you should consider the favourite colours of the recipient or perhaps choose shades that blend with a colour scheme in their home .
2 We go through the dozen or so photograph albums that Christine has made up for her , and Anna points out her grown-up ‘ sisters ’ , Christine and Sarah-Jane ; she also names her nieces and nephews for me .
3 They may experience visions , seeing , hearing or even smelling things that others ca n't ( hallucinations ) .
4 In this computerised version of the classroom favourite each opponent has the ability to plant mines , sweep for mines or even have submarines that dive .
5 Euratom failed completely to control and direct developments , or indeed to resist governments that wanted to weaken the supranational element in this policy area .
6 With each of is lost a distinctive system of concepts , a system for encoding and encapsulating experience , and a literature of songs and stories that probably contain elements that go back for thousands of years .
7 The area immediately round Susan 's house had suffered relatively little damage , but they soon left that behind to enter roads that were devastated .
8 But I have come to warn you that ahead Lie hazards that are little short of dread .
9 Vicky and I , although occasionally playing roles that had something to do with the ( slight ) story , were more often in a group ( Country Maidens , Serving Wenches , even Coiffed Nuns … ) .
10 The school took a determined line in support of its belief in a right to education for all and eventually convinced parents that ‘ standards ’ were far from suffering and ‘ those traveller/gipsy children ’ gradually became known and valued as individuals and opposition virtually faded away .
11 In other words , the industry is concerned less with the cleverness of technology than with using it to confer value on information and so create products that customers will want to buy .
12 Notwithstanding the inconclusiveness of our findings , some comments are appropriate if only to raise questions that deserve further consideration .
13 ‘ Nearly all supporters feel that their relative is not safe outside on their own , they spend a lot of time sitting around at home doing nothing , they can not occupy themselves , they seem unsteady on their feet , and naturally forget things that have just happened … .
14 Civilian users can not decipher as much information from the satellites ' signals and thus get fixes that are less precise .
15 It 's the first chance I 've had of spending a couple of months at home , leading a normal life and just doing things that are interesting to do .
16 But if the theory was mathematically consistent and always gave predictions that agreed with observations , we could be reasonably confident that it was the right one .
17 Therefore , employers are now required to apply a risk assessment score to specific situations , and also to implement measures that will address the identified risks .
18 He sent messages en clair which were highly secret and carefully ciphered messages that were of no possible secret value .
19 These parts are superbly realised by the cast ; Clive Francis , James Grout , Sarah Badel , Richard Huw and Lucy Scott all giving the sort of lived-in and clearly progressing performances that you rarely find in the same play .
20 As a ghetto they create their own lifestyles and moral values and often express theologies that are anti-Christian as well as anti-human — pelagian , Arminian and gnostic .
21 Amongst the many excellent and well researched books that have been written on the subject of bereavement the following are outstanding in their capacity to help those who have suffered a major loss : Grief and how to live with it by Sarah Morris ( published in 1971 by George Allen and Unwin ) ; A grief observed by C. S. Lewis ( published in 1961 by Faber and Faber ) — of particular interest to widowers — and Bereavement .
22 LENNOX LEWIS arrived here in Las Vegas last night and immediately quashed rumours that he could be paid to step aside if Riddick Bowe wins the world heavyweight crown .
23 Again , this has the status of an authentic attempt to learn about our world through looking , and then to find words that come close to getting things true .
24 Important though this literature is , the main purpose of later sections is to isolate as far as is generally possible the impact of the government budget on the Lorenz curve that would otherwise have obtained , and then to consider proposals that are more closely tied to the poverty literature .
25 ‘ We will introduce Intel-compatible parts first and then offer versions that feature proprietary architectural enhancements , ’ the company says .
26 ‘ We will introduce Intel-compatible parts first and then offer versions that feature proprietary architectural enhancements , ’ the company says .
27 Everywhere people had used mud intelligently and in a planned manner , applying the science of structures , and fully exploiting opportunities that mud offered as a building material in the local climate .
28 Some of the characteristics of primates are flexible fingers with nails rather than claws , and forward facing eyes that give binocular vision and are vital for judging distance .
29 The Minister was asked many specific questions about the lessons that were learned from the sell-offs and the asset strippings in England and Wales , which in some cases involved Scottish companies and certainly involved companies that will be engaged in the bids for parts of the Scottish Bus Group .
30 But should health clubs and gyms really keep and actively promote machines that can potentially do us harm ?
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