Example sentences of "[noun pl] that [pron] [vb -s] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 One may quibble with some of Jakobson 's distinctions and classifications , but it must be stressed that these are only a small selection of the multitude of relationships that he identifies in the space of this short poem .
2 For example , one surface dyslexic can accurately define the irregular words that he regularizes in pronunciation tasks ( for instance , pronouncing ‘ colonel ’ as ‘ COL-OH-NELL ’ ) .
3 Whatever the motivation , these amalgamations may happen several times during the months that he cares for the flock .
4 The genetic information stored in the viral DNA or RNA must be used to produce the viral proteins that it codes for ( D in Figure ) .
5 The big , the big advantage Chair , and one of the reasons that it appeals to us to , to go along with Age Concern on this is that , as you know , the area of activity in terms of day centre provision in which they are very active , is one whereby on the current grant mechanisms for community care , and our need to spend eighty five percent in the voluntary and independent sector , whilst they were directly employed by us , we could n't divert a substantial amount of that money in their direction if they wished to develop services .
6 I mean yeah as you say he 's very high personable person , there must be some reason behind it er and a lot of the theoretical reasons that he says of
7 The policies that he stands for — of high taxation and centralised control — are the policies that would drive this country to ruin .
8 In addition to that , John Prescott was mentioned , and John could not attend the meetings that he does around the country if he did not have the facility to be able to be away from Parliament during times when erm , there are votes that need to be taken .
9 We , in this country and indeed in this house , can be very deeply complacent when indeed we should be ever vigilant about our democracy and the very precious forms that it takes of which one was the er public inquiry stage of the erm boundary commission procedures .
10 The phenotypic effects of a gene are normally seen as all the effects that it has on the body in which it sits .
11 But we shall now see that the phenotypic effects of a gene need to be thought of as all the effects that it has on the world .
12 The gene itself benefits , in terms of its vertical transmission , from the average effects that it has on a whole series of bodies .
13 The Bank of England reserves the right to decline to accept bids that it judges to be out of line with market conditions even if this should mean that it does not sell all stock on offer .
14 Porter seems to agree with this view , but says that the extra value obtained from putting the results of the sorts of analyses that he recommends into the matrix form is marginal compared to the value derived from the underlying analysis itself .
15 He 'll come from The Porch , he brings his paper bags , his cups that he has for his drinks , and he 'll leave them there .
16 The UK Department of Trade & Industry on Monday licensed a new transatlantic telephone operator on Monday , and the company has now begun operating : Swiftcall Ltd is using lines that it leases from Mercury Communications Ltd with calls to be delivered in the US by Sprint Corp , and will charge between 25 pence and 28 pence a minute plus tax , with a sign-on fee of £1,000 for companies , £50 for residential subscribers , the fee to be set against call charges until it runs out ; Swiftcall founder Tom McCabe told the paper that even at 30% capacity , he could reach annual turnover of £10m and make a substantial profit ; he plans a £2m investment in the first three years and will run the service with a staff of four from the World Trade Centre , near the Tower of London .
17 ‘ Women in the industry are not dissatisfied with such work ’ asserts Blauner , without giving his evidence for this statement : ‘ Work does not have the central importance and meaning in their lives that it does for men , since their most important roles are those of wives and mothers ’ .
18 In 1990 Tesco made the Association the beneficiary of one of the six nationwide collections that it allows in its stores .
19 Sales of its Unix products will , for instance , outstrip revenues from the DEC versions that it markets over the next year or so , it reckons .
20 There are the elaborate tunnel entrances like Box and Bramhope and others , the great viaducts like Monsal Dale and Dutton , the bridges like Saltash and Severn ; and the charming survivors among early railway stations that one comes across unexpectedly almost anywhere in England .
21 They will be fascinated at the incredible insects that he meets inside the Peach as it floats away over the ocean and delighted when the seagulls come to the rescue and James and the insects inside the Peach are carried away towards America for a hero 's reception .
22 By then the market place accommodated seven annual fairs ( three for horses and four for cattle , cheese , cloth and leather ) in addition to the weekly Saturday market , and all about the central area the full variety of shops , inns , businesses and workshops that one associates with a market town were to be found .
23 The experimental city is about to become one of the ideas that everybody knows about , thinks about ; and a few actually do it , make it happen …
24 And he says he has acquired some skill in communicating technical ideas that he uses in presentations for Lucas .
25 Roy Pointer : ‘ I have been asking for over ten years that there needs to be some bold plans , mission strategy , developed within the denominations and I have not been aware of any until now .
26 The questions that one asks in a survey must be derived from the object of the research itself : the schedule is only a tool for obtaining information .
27 Indeed , Dahl locates the questions that he poses in New Haven in the context of a tradition of inquiry dating back to de Tocqueville .
28 THE OXFORD BOOK OF APHORISMS ed by John Gross Oxford , £6.99 APHORISMS in the post-Johnsonian sense of ‘ a short pithy statement containing a truth of general import ’ are verbal successes that everyone strives for and few achieve , as Thoreau said , and John Gross here quotes , ‘ A perfectly healthy sentence is extremely rare . ’
29 ‘ Now that her marriage has finally split , there are only two things that she cares about in life : her sons and her charity work .
30 The County Council reallocates resources from things that it sells into things like new build , new schools ; if we sell a piece of a playing field or whatever , then we will put , plough the money back into capital resources within the education service somewhere else .
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