Example sentences of "[coord] that [pron] have [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | It means that there has to be some violence used against the woman to overbear her will or that there has to be a threat of violence as a result of which her will is overborne . ’ |
2 | ‘ Or that you 'd at least had some control over what happened . ’ |
3 | This growth and specialization mean that more and more people must be found to staff the hospitals , clinics and rehabilitation units , and that they have to be trained . |
4 | None the less , it is clear both that they are substantial and that they have to be offset against any putative gains in efficiency brought about by the internal market . |
5 | It may be argued , for instance , that the ‘ total wars ’ of the twentieth century , because they detach whole populations from their accustomed ways of life , and at the same time impose great sacrifices upon them , give rise to strong reforming movements even in the victorious nations ; and that they have in fact contributed significantly to the development of the welfare state . |
6 | A fierce aunt shocked me by telling me shyness is a form of rudeness and selfishness , and that I had to be the first to talk to two people . |
7 | But then , having exhausted his recollections of the circumstances of his writing the paper , he switched to more personal matters and enquired carefully how I was getting on in a way that made me reel that my mission had been worthwhile and that I had by no means wasted his morning . |
8 | A more recent commentator on Marx 's concept of ideology , Jorge Larrain , accepts that the concept is vague and that it has to be worked out from what little Marx wrote ( Larrain 1979 : 36 ) . |
9 | And that it has to be paid before probate is granted . |
10 | The victim may have an action for malicious falsehood , however , if it can be proved that the untrue statement was made spitefully , dishonestly or recklessly , and that it has in fact caused financial loss . |
11 | If so , it was impatience of a singular kind — not just the feeling that he had something important to contribute , but the certainty that France ( and the whole world ) was on the verge of a colossal crisis and that he had to be ready . |
12 | Only later did it emerge that the Germans had supported his candidature for the post of High Commissioner in Danzig , and that he had since 1920 been on very friendly terms with Baron Ernst von Wiesäker , the head of the political section of the German Foreign Office . |
13 | ‘ Two men to get out of a van down there in a minute 's time and tell my father that Sean Walsh is a criminal wanted for six murders in Dublin and that he has to be handcuffed and out of there this instant . ’ |
14 | The vet said that nothing could be done to save her and that she had to be put down . |
15 | We believe that there is , but that it has to be recognised that no single model of ‘ what law is ’ and how it relates to ‘ justice ’ can provide any instant prescription for the tactics to be adopted . |