Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 So either we shall have to disallow such a possibility and decree that nothing qualifies as a genuine proposition unless its truth-value is fixed for all time , i.e. that all propositions are what is sometimes called " eternal " propositions , or we shall have to accept that truth-value is not an integral part of the objective propositional content .
2 One familiar view is that nothing qualifies as a genuine proper name unless it singles out its object in an unambiguous fashion , and that this task can be accomplished only by a logically simple symbol .
3 Just be prepared for Connemara enthusiasts to tell you that theirs is the only breed worth bothering about , Welsh Cob experts too insist that nothing compares with a good Section D and Highland/Fell/Dales etc exhibitors feel exactly the same !
4 They knew him so well that everyone fell into a hush and appeared to move around him on tiptoes .
5 He said the figures , ‘ implied that everyone removed from a hospital waiting list has been treated when blatantly that is not the case .
6 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 .
7 When confronted with Plymouth Brethren or other sects at the door , my major defence ploy was to claim that I lived in a ‘ Quaker house ’ .
8 Suppose that I point at a chair and say ‘ By ‘ chair ’ I mean that ’ , nothing in what I have done creates the desired meaning for the word ‘ chair ’ unless I can further characterise what it is about the object I am pointing to that I am taking as relevant ; for example , I might say ‘ that sort of furniture ’ , and this would improve matters , but I have to have the concept of furniture first .
9 I 'm not er a great fan of the monarchy , although that I would say that I come from a family which is , devoted a large portion of it 's life in service and work to the royal family .
10 Also a photo of all the officers of Walsall that I saw in a second hand shop and I went and bought it for a few pence .
11 He recommended that I go to a hospital and see a psychiatrist .
12 I thanked God for the small wrist compass that I wore as a matter of habit whenever I set out in a boat .
13 Now that my sons are becoming more independent , I have time for myself and confidence in middle age that I lacked as a youngster .
14 It seems that I count as a visitor . ’
15 What really struck me was that I looked like a concentration camp prisoner .
16 I 've lived on Skomer for six years now and before that I looked after a smaller seabird reserve on St Margaret 's Island .
17 One day , in one of these tiny streets , with shops on either side and with stalls of street vendors in front of them , the way was so crowded that I got to a place where it was impossible to move .
18 It 's a piece of pipe that I got at a plumbing supply place ; I bought a twelve foot piece of pipe and had it cut into pieces a little over an inch long .
19 ‘ The important thing is that I got in a couple of block tackles , which was significant .
20 After you calmly tell me that I walked through a fucking wall ! ’
21 Her hair was fair , so that I thought for a moment of the other woman I had met recently , Elizabeth Lavenza .
22 I repeat a proposition that I made to a previous Leader of the House .
23 I wish that the Minister would respond to a point that I made in a debate last week when I spoke of the tragedy that the employment advisory service — available to prisoners both before and after their release — had been withdrawn by the Government .
24 First , I believe that I speak for a number of my hon. Friends when I say that we want the Bill to reach the statute book , come what may , in view of the approaching general election , and I hope that it will be given a fair wind .
25 She suggested that I speak to a man who had lived nearby in 1948 , and after some hours he arrived at the house , a middle-aged Israeli with a lined face and very bloodshot eyes .
26 He laughed back when I told him that I came from a poor barrio in Britain and that we were no longer referred to as people either .
27 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 .
28 The application to the local community is one that I put as a challenge to all : How can we help people to take seriously membership in the Eucharistic community of faith ?
29 It 's also the fact that I know for a fact , I know for a fact that she 's very frightened of his temper when it happens .
30 As I have two young children , I fit my working time around school and sleep times so I am lucky to have a small room at home that I use as a studio .
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