Example sentences of "[adv] that i [verb] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | I found much that I identified with , the old lady looking in the TV shop window , enjoying all channels , one assumes , the ‘ Eye-drop ’ queue in the hospital . |
2 | As I I love being a candidate , I love talking to voters , I like being active and doing things and that 's the reason basically that I want to be your Euro candidate , I 'm ready to be a candidate again . |
3 | Well I can say personally that I went from a size twelve to a twenty and its a medical problem , its the , not an eating one though , you know any thing to with any diet or any thing like that , completely medical so er it takes a bit of coping with when you 've been slim and then all of a sudden you have this weight that , no diet will remove . |
4 | So that I married into what you call a railway family . |
5 | She drew the word out , so that I heard in its simple syllable all the pain and hurt of the drug . |
6 | Then they felled me , so that I lay by Elsbeth and was as helpless as she . |
7 | Here I want to vary the times so that I hear from a true cross-section of our listeners , and those who listen to the graveyard shift , for instance , probably never hear the breakfast show . |
8 | Her hair was fair , so that I thought for a moment of the other woman I had met recently , Elizabeth Lavenza . |
9 | I will join some group within the church so that I relate to others on a personal level . |
10 | In some places there were nagging clouds of black flies , so that I climbed through the trees like a new Orestes , cursing and slapping . |
11 | Er at present I get sixty one pound a week old age pension , I 've a works pension of about twenty some pound a week , so that I live on eighty pound a week . |
12 | Sometimes at work I feel I have had enough and I am overwhelmed by the material so that I thirst for meditation which can be a rededication and a balancing of our lives . |
13 | It was half-hidden by mud , so that I trod on its legs before I realized . |
14 | It was some time after ten o'clock that I strolled through the gate on to the terrace . |
15 | This does n't mean that I have slopped believing , but only that I believe in my own way . |
16 | It is only that I live in Dresden and that I fight like this that keeps me sane . |
17 | It is thus that I arrive at my multiplier for the whole life of eighteen . |
18 | I it 's just that I remember on Monday morning hearing on the radio that it was being talked about that afternoon and of course immediately forgot to go and get a copy of the next day 's Guardian and read about it and all the other |
19 | It 's just that I happened to . |
20 | I 'm sure glad I 've got it 's just that I seem to be . |
21 | It is just that I want to be free . ’ |
22 | I 'm not proud , it 's just that I want to be in the right place . |
23 | ‘ Generally that I had to be convinced any person posed a risk — and to give a warning before I fired . ’ |
24 | Why is it lately that I go to , before I start my my work |
25 | My youngest daughter Ella will be two on Sunday — yet it seems like only yesterday that I looked at her pink , scrunched-up face for the first time and fell in love with her funny , quirky personality . |
26 | ‘ It has helped me see more than ever that I compete for my country and always will . ’ |
27 | It was not until years later that I heard about the societies known as Buffaloes and Foresters . |
28 | It was not until eleven years later that I returned to England and saw Biddy and Joe again , although I had been writing regularly to them . |
29 | It was to be many years later that I learned of the strictures Tata had accepted once he had proposed marriage to my mother , a Roman Catholic . |
30 | She got out as soon as she could , and found work in the weaving sheds — " she was a good weaver ; six looms under her by the time she was sixteen " — marry , produce nine children , eight of whom emigrated to the cotton mills of Massachusetts before the First World War , managed , " never went before the Guardians " .1 It was much , much later that I learned from One Hand Tied Behind Us that four was the usual number of looms for a Lancashire weaver ; Burnley weavers were not well organised , and my great-grandmother had six not because she was a good weaver but because she was exploited . " |