Example sentences of "[art] [noun] that [pron] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 During the second section I will look at the activities that I myself was involved with during my time in post .
2 To trigger section 76(2) ( b ) , however , it must be the case that there something was ‘ said or done ’ which was likely to render a confession unreliable , and it has been held that this means something said or done to D , as distinct from some words or conduct of D himself ( Goldenberg ( 1988 ) 88 Cr.App.R. 285 ) .
3 if you actually went through the experience that they themselves were
4 For the worry that they themselves might go down the same road meant that they could see that teachers who were now ‘ like that ’ had once been enthusiastic , committed students like themselves .
5 So , when we , you can imagine the noise that they I mean , it 's not their fault .
6 The opportunities for domestic conflict are obvious , but at the same time the older generation of farm workers are made more aware of the opportunities that they themselves missed and of their lowly economic position compared with workers in other industries .
7 McMurdo would like to persist with the illusion that everything he touches turns to gold , but several Scottish professionals think otherwise .
8 I 'm not sure whether , you see I think the management time issue is very related to this , but I think it 's a separate issue , it 's a major concern I 've got at the moment that there is , I mean I know everybody 's got their own arguments but there has been no time at ever in the future that anybody who goes back further than twenty years in the service can recall , where York has had such a small amount of management time as it 's
9 The nearest we can get to a guarantee of success in our moral choices is the cogency of the arguments that we bring to bear in their support coupled with the recognition that what we are almost invariably doing , as MacIver points out and thinkers like Sartre have laboured to establish , is continually deciding between possible alternatives .
10 It is the fungi that they themselves eat .
11 She would raise her lamp and view the lover that she herself had grown , even if this meant that she must lose him for ever .
12 Gerald Graff , in Professing Literature , is sympathetic to Scholes 's approach , quoting him to the effect that what we call skill in reading involves ‘ a knowledge of the codes that were operative in the composition of any given text and the historical situation in which it was composed . ’
13 Part of the Stress Syndrome is the likelihood that whatever you do to cope will only result in yet more self-criticism .
14 He knew the figures , the likelihood that she herself had been the victim of abuse was quite high .
15 It was therefore decided by the Council that anyone who elects to pay by a single lump sum payment should do so by or on 31 May in any one year .
16 He said : ‘ This Government is asking the long-term sick to bear an unfair burden to bale Mr Major out of the mess that he himself has created . ’
17 We have tried to make it clear in the law that what we are establishing is a parallel procedure and not an exclusive procedure , so that the other law as it existed , whatever it is , still does exist today , but that here is a prescribed procedure which terminally ill patients may choose to use should they wish to do so .
18 Dahl tends to view elites as a species of potential conspiracy against the public interest ; this is one reason why he rejects the accusation that he himself is a surreptitious elitist and why he prefers to refer to ‘ polyarchy ’ .
19 The attitude that you yourself hold towards your jobs in life will be reflected by those with whom you come into contact , either in business or in private life .
20 Altho , although if one is eventually going to talk about the report one could to make it clear to the parents that what one is a subject report and the other is a summate report .
21 Quite early there came the contradiction that anyone who takes on an extreme diet must meet .
22 Because because there 's so many there 's so many things that are going on at the moment that it it does take time .
23 I think when somebody teaches it they teach it in the premise that everybody they 're talking to is heterosexual .
24 It 's as simple as that cos we could send you off to St Andrews or something like that to er to well I 'm just I 'm homing in on the erm on the golf on the basis that I you you 're er you 're representative for a a company that does is involved with golf equipment .
25 Not merely is the Criminal Division of the Court of Appeal hardly the most suitable tribunal to determine complex questions of civil law — the pressures on the court 's time aside — but the very fact that this is the Criminal Division carries with it the consequence that whatever we decide can not be the subject of appeal : see section 33 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968 .
26 He made the mistake of attributing to the press the importance that they themselves give to newspapers and journalists .
27 It was absolutely great and confirmed to everybody in the band that what I was doing was viable , and I got picked up by an agent right away — the same night , in fact . ’
28 Similarly , younger relatives can come to the conclusion that whatever they do nothing is right or sufficient .
29 I again spent most of the afternoon looking for gaunt-face , coming in the end to the conclusion that whatever he was doing on the train he was n't travelling because of an overpowering interest in racing .
30 He had early and with total certainty come to the conclusion that whatever he had as an actor was beyond his comprehension .
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