Example sentences of "[prep] that [pron] [verb] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ It was at that place I told you about that I knew him , ’ he said to Lili .
2 So you actually write down questions so much going on you ca n't be expected to remember everything and if you 've got just you know sort of questions written down the page like what is your name , it 's simple as that it gets you to do , what ?
3 He does n't see us as a part of a crowd , he does n't see us as a number on a computer , he does n't see us as numbers on a bank account , or in some other organizational er er er computer set up or whatever it is , he does n't just see us as that he sees us as individuals .
4 This is particularly noticeable in Between ; indeed she herself says ‘ it 's really with Between that I discovered what I could do with language ’ ( 1989e:83 ) .
5 He was n't just pontificating , he was n't just starting out things he thought about , he and and , ideas that had come into his head , he spoke as one who had authority and because of that they heard him .
6 We had a long series of various pieces of research , one of which was actually talk to enormous amount of customers through customer and as a consequence of that we 've we decided to form a fairly business to produce a very different pair of stores , different in that they wo n't trade in the traditional way that M F Is gone ah they 'll carry different merchandise , different price lines .
7 So you 'd say that as a b er as a result of that it did it did er so it did When you say it served its purpose , it did improve the image ?
8 You know when I when I first thought of that I thought you know I 'd let us keep it .
9 And she had one or two hires including higher art and then somebody said oh that would be good for the P R department is looking for staff so she now is doing a superb job running a marketing operation , editing an internal newspaper it all herself and erm all of that I taught her , now I want to move her on to the stage where she can get professional recognition for this , now that is what I call an absolute beginner
10 I felt he maintained a distance and because of that I found him more difficult to approach than Dalglish if there was anything I needed to discuss .
11 They believe that reality ‘ points beyond itself ’ in the sort of way that the pile of books points beyond itself , in that we know something must be holding it up or it would fall .
12 Of course , there is still one sense in which Derrida and de Man are wrong : in that they believe they are arguing aginst Austin .
13 The reasons may be negative , in that they find themselves less attracted to , or less successful in , an original choice than they had expected , or positive in that experience of the alternative ( and to some an entirely novel ) field develops changed interests .
14 It 's international in that they see themselves above nationhood , beyond patriotism , and they want the war to end .
15 So were , were management quite flexible in that , in that they , you described they allowed , stewards monitored the , the incentive scheme , er they had two weekly meetings , were management quite flexible in that they gave you time off or er whatever ?
16 We were gaining a total experience from the States , and the high-level ideas related to the low-level ones in that they allowed us to accept them .
17 In consequence some human beings appear to be more like Jesus ( who is simply equated with God ) than are others , in that they share his maleness .
18 Moreover , such texts are the more dangerous in that they affect us at a subconscious level .
19 It is sometimes suggested that the absence of note-taking can be a help to the informant , in that it frees him from the inhibiting effects of a recorder and a notebook .
20 Simply formulating a title of some sort can be a useful achievement , in that it helps you decide how you want to focus your writing .
21 Whether one could go further and show that any particular process was specific to a particular memory , in that it represented it and only it within the brain , remained to be seen .
22 His last major document , Evangelii Nuntiandi ( 1975 ) , was even more ‘ collegial ’ in that it represented his resolution of the impasse of the 1974 Synod on Evangelization .
23 The L & NWR is unique in that it manufactures its own accumulators for carriage lighting plants .
24 Although Landry makes clear that the shoe does not always fit , this sort of approach , as suggested above , is dangerous in that it shapes what a scholar is willing to see .
25 Although ignoring man and control systems , taking many detailed facts from the period of physical geography before systems and beginning with two chapters which are very climatologically inspired , nevertheless the approach was refreshing in that it indicated what could be done to redress the imbalance detected by some physical geographers ( e.g. Brown , 1975 ) and to counter the increasingly fissiparist tendencies of the previous decades .
26 I find this emphasis generally correct in that it describes what the anorexic girl believes to lie in store for her as a woman : a passive role , a position of helplessness , a loss of self .
27 In that it gives us ‘ knowledge ’ , as opposed to mere ‘ belief ’ or ‘ faith ’ , of course it has ; but Locke also means that revelation must be answerable to reason .
28 This work offers a good illustration of the range of economic support which is given between kin , and is also important in that it stresses its two-way nature .
29 This marriage was advantageous to him in that it introduced him into the local society but it was to last only three years , for in 1573 Jane died of smallpox at the age of 20 .
30 However that may be , it is , surely , part of the very meaning of being rational that one tries to organise one 's mental stance towards the world so that it is consistent and comprehensive , consistent in that its elements do not frustrate each other , comprehensive in that it covers one 's stance to as wide as possible a range of phenomena .
  Next page