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

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1 But er I mean we We 've spoken about it before , on the platform , and things like that , that I mean everybody knows the score that if something happens if you 're if you 're sleeping you 've not got a an excellent chance , put it like that , I mean you er I mean nobody ever expected anything like what happened on piper to happen any on that scale .
2 They learned that if they blew and sucked a little at all baits before they accepted them , the safe ones moved easily and the dangerous ones did not .
3 Wrote to Lloyds Bank telling them , that if they try and keep
4 She could have argued that if they went as planned to farm in another country , nobody would know about her past .
5 He wrote that if they agreed that :
6 Through his Arab interpreter he told them that if they did as they were told no harm need come to them .
7 It was a night of frustration for Wales , who knew beforehand that if they won and then registered wins in their final two home games against Cyprus and Romania , they would qualify .
8 there 's a psychological as aspect in some so much that if they think that a policeman is gon na walk round the corner er , they 're not so keen on doing it .
9 All you need to know about Maxwell is that if everybody behaved as he did , the economy would soon collapse in an explosion of selfish parasitism .
10 But she had read that if you turn and f ace the nameless fear , just once , you never have that dream again .
11 It 's the classic chicken and the egg problem , that if you try and identify something starting one area , and using that as a sort of causal factor for another area of behaviour , I 'm not sure whether , in the majority of cases , you can satisfactorily identify one as being the cause and the other being the result of that causal factor .
12 You are then guaranteed that if you register and receive the full packaged software it will work on your machine and with your printer .
13 We can surely conclude that if you know that you are sitting reading , you know that you are not a brain in a vat , and hence ( by simple modus tollens ) that since you do n't know that you are not a brain in a vat ( agreed above ) you do n't know that you are sitting reading .
14 No I think , I reckon that if you knew that the bloke was an easy pull , they would n't do it if they , if they knew they could n't get the girl cos otherwise it would be embarrassing for them , but if they knew that she was an easy pull they 'd do it for a joke .
15 He was going on and on , and erm , I said , well , I 'm sure that if you go and pick it up , it will be working .
16 For he had stumbled across — or it had been revealed to him — that if you act as you deeply want to act and if that , sublimely , coincides with what you aim for , then nothing is simpler , nothing is more dynamic , nothing is happier .
17 First note that if you argue that , you must now logically think that the disadvantage has gone : prime-borrowing rates in Japan have risen to over 8% , roughly level with those in America .
18 I I do suggest that if you feel that some easing is required that er you could specifically refer to exceptions that will be set out er in local plans .
19 You see it makes it easier for us as well because it means that if you do if you are there we can leave you in charge for ten minutes while
20 you think that if you work if you , if you think about it , in other words he has married a woman who is the mother of a wife of his father who he calls mother .
21 my Lord , my Lord er unless I 've miss understood your Lordship it fits in the sense that if you think that unreasonably or even unfairly disclude someone from the market , you 're are excluding someone who would compete in the market , you 're taking someone out who may of had an impact on the market , may of brought prices down , offer better terms and conditions
22 Indeed , finally , David Frost asked : ’ I mean in the situation that if you find that those two moves , the tax at 50p and the National Insurance contribution raised £4.5 billion or £4.8 billion ’ — which David Frost said was more than the right hon. and learned Gentleman needed — ’ you would n't adjust what you 're going to do , downwards ? ’
23 The conclusion seems to be that if I recognize that I have once wrongly claimed to know that p , then I can not ever claim to know that p unless I can show a relevant difference between the two cases .
24 I could s I I even though it might make me a lot of money because I know that if I got if I made a dozen phone calls and did n't get any deals I 'd be out there wanting play the er I would n't trust myself .
25 Yeah but you see the thing is that if I come and meet you by the time you no point .
26 I 've got a job that I love doing , and er , I also take the view that if I came and did this programme and moaned away at everybody , and er , moaned away about everything , nobody would ring me up , and nobody would listen .
27 I thought that if I ran and it was a coronary , it should have got worse , but I ‘ ve run round the block and it has n't , so it must be indigestion . ’
28 I hypothesise that if I move and turn the lamp in a particular way I will get the result I want .
29 It had also occurred to him that if he wrote that report it would be the last thing he ever did in the Army .
30 So that if it happened that I died they would be able to make a campaign issue of it .
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