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

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1 This traumatic experience had such a shattering effect on the porter that he left London Transport for good , swearing never to visit Covent Garden Station again .
2 All of these defences apply only where the person is not shown to have intended to stir up racial hatred , and all of the participants have the defence that they had no reason to suspect that the material was threatening , abusive or insulting .
3 But in certain circumstances , the defendant may exculpate himself from liability either by raising doubts as to whether he had such an intention or awareness , or by establishing on a balance of probabilities the defence that he lacked mens rea .
4 So far as the performer is concerned , he has the defence that he did not know and had no reason to suspect that a programme involving the use of the offending material would be included in a cable broadcast , or that the circumstances in which such material was included would be such that racial hatred would be likely to be stirred up .
5 First thing is to make sure that you get an opportunity to discuss it and I agree other people who actually res responded in seem to collect the fee and I am not paid to collect the fee to try to make it very difficult for people to respond but nevertheless the numbers that we , I think in terms of other areas , other areas , the response that we got it is a bit ironic though to sit here in the afternoon having listened in the morning to a lovely discussion which was agonising three hundred , five hundred thousand for on traffic calming .
6 If you can hold your feelings and examine them , force yourself to hear the voice and ask why it produces the response that it does , you are beginning to get the better of it , to break the fearful silence that surrounds it and , incidentally , to add another voice to your writing repertoire .
7 ‘ You 'll never get that ’ was the response that I got , ‘ You had better start with us ’ .
8 If it 's inherited from an estate that of itself er attracts no tax , so there tax position would only be the income that they received from it would be subject to income tax and it would be added to their own assets so that when they die in due course then they 've inheritance payable there .
9 That so somewhere in i in between you 've got to be receiving the income that you generate .
10 A first step in the process is to examine the gap between what the company income is likely to be from the products now in production and the income that it wishes to have over the next planning period .
11 It has been able to obtain a third of the income that it needs from sponsorship , while a further third has been obtained from admission charges .
12 We did n't make enough of the opportunity that we had er in the attacking third .
13 I am grateful for the opportunity that we have been afforded by my hon. Friend the Member for Eccles ( Miss Lestor ) to debate an extremely important subject .
14 Secondly the , the constraint reduces the opportunity that we have to pursue the ethical investment policies which will have regard to the aims and objectives of the Council as a whole , and then lastly there is the matter of practicality .
15 My hon. Friend referred to the opportunity that he had of presenting the result of the vote on the 1986 Bill .
16 Because of this there is little or no possibility that somebody somewhere else will recognize the merits of the actions you are taking , or the opportunity that you have uncovered , and of their own free will line up and help you .
17 I am very grateful for the opportunity that you gave me to speak to the NFU Branch Committee on Thursday last .
18 The decision to maintain the acceptance of a long-standing invitation to go on Mr. Byrne 's show in Dublin on Friday night was prompted by the opportunity that it afforded to speak to the people of the Republic of Ireland about terrorism and the response of a democratic society .
19 I shall take great pleasure in saying to those to whom the hon. Gentleman wishes me to speak — here comes the opportunity that I mentioned earlier — that , as the chairman of Ford in Britain observed yesterday , Labour 's economic policies would prove suicidal for our economy .
20 And so they 've got to they they 'll be asked the question rather , and they know the answer 's going to on the stand that they go to .
21 I fundamentally disagree with his proposition , although I congratulate him on the stand that he has taken for his principles .
22 Within the assembly council I personally valued your contributions the very courteous and thoughtful way in which you presented these and the courage with which you expressed at times the stand that you had to take for the interest of the Board .
23 And she offered him half of the yam that she had brought with her .
24 It is , however , in my judgment , a valid objection to the section 6(2) order sought by paragraph 11 of the prayer that it appears to be directed to restoring only the investors to their former positions .
25 I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for the sympathy that he has expressed , and I share his sense of encouragement , brought about by the action taken by individual members of the community and groups which are seeking to call an end to the terrible experiences that we have all had .
26 For the recording , we reseated the orchestra for each variation to create the acoustic that one sees and imagines when one looks at the score .
27 If Labour Members abandon the trusts , which , from the terminology that I have quoted , are so close to their own policy , would they but acknowledge the fact , it is not the Conservative party that would be the loser but the delivery of patient care in Scotland .
28 The weakness that we 've identified is that because we 're new we have n't learnt the game .
29 The reduction that we found in 1992 , in both gonorrhoea and HIV infection , is heartening , but vigorous and continuing health promotion will be necessary to continue this trend .
30 Marchmont himself was forced to admit that ‘ Lord Anson 's promises are so long in the performing that I reckon none of us will build sudden expectations upon them ’ .
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