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

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1 This group of people was recognised by the meeting in Tokyo over a year ago , and this is an issue that many people — both my friends and strangers that I come across in collecting or canvassing for Amnesty — ask me about .
2 Starting off with paragraph thirty three of P P G three , , erm you 'll see in my statement that I 've actually in seeking to address point A dealt with each of the conditions that P P G three er refers to , for which a new settlement should be contemplated , and you will see that I 've reached a conclusion that having regarded the unique circumstances of York , the Greater York new settlement does represent an appropriate and justified policy response , you 'll se also see my statement , I 've taken some comfort from the fact that the good practice guide that has been published by the department of the environment , has endorsed the approach that North Yorkshire County Council has taken towards the special circumstances of the Greater York area .
3 Between the wars , and you did n't know this that erm loads of the history that I read here in Britain very different from the history
4 And much as I coveted a wonderful watercolour by Albert that I came across in an Alice Springs gallery for 4,000 dollars I was even more taken with the traditional native art , particularly since it seemed to offer useful hints about a problem I had of seeing the outback in ways other than through the window-on-the-world vision that developed in Renaissance Italy .
5 And , as we have seen , there is plentiful evidence from a variety of experimental procedures to encourage the conclusion that this prediction is well founded , The theories of latent inhibition that I considered earlier in this chapter ( e.g. that proposed by Wagner ) were concerned with phenomena that suggested that latent inhibition depends upon how well the target stimulus is predicted by its antecedents .
6 I warn the right hon. Member for Sparkbrook — I hope that he will accept that I do so in the best possible spirit — not to be carried along by media representations of what happened at Brixton .
7 Richard Morton is generally credited with the first medical description in 1689 and he poignantly captured the key clinical feature : ‘ I do not remember that I did ever in all my practice see one , that was conversant with the living so much wasted with the greatest degree of a consumption ( like a skeleton only clad with skin ) ’ .
8 IT MAY surprise readers of this column that I have never in my life voted Conservative at a general election .
9 Before dealing with the many points raised by right hon. and hon. Members , I propose to say something about Wales but , before doing that , I should point out that I have never in my life before spoken from one doughnut to another .
10 His fingers brushed lightly across her lips , tracing a path of flame that she felt even in the midst of her anger .
11 They may have been glad , since she was turning out to be hard to amuse , that she slept deeply in the early afternoons .
12 In other words , Saab felt that she had less in common with ‘ feminists ’ in general ( which , as we know , is often a shorthand for White Western women ) than with women of the Orient .
13 Someone was half a length behind her on her outside but Kelly sensed that she had more in hand than he did .
14 When she 'd finished she got her bag and anorak , checking that she had enough in her purse for bus fare , and let herself out the kitchen door .
15 And so it was that she died alone in a mental hospital — as Eliot told Violet Schiff , one of the few who had known them both from their earliest days together , death could only have been a deliverance for her .
16 And she had bloomed and flowered beneath a touch that she sensed deep in her innermost self was not simply skill and experience , but a kind of homage to womanhood .
17 So insistent was the noise that she padded downstairs in her nightshirt and picked up the handset .
18 In passing she mentions that she has sometimes in despair hit her children .
19 What I liked about her was that she charged less in the 6ds than she did in the 1/3s : she had a sliding scale .
20 Instantly , as if he had somehow thrown an electrical switch , she felt a surge of responsive excitement — so strong and so unexpected that she trembled involuntarily in his embrace .
21 We wondered if you realized that she walks right in the middle of the road ; some visitors do , you know , thinking there is no traffic here .
22 And this is of course , as if I agree with the view that you expressed yesterday in a general context , although it was made specifically then in relation to one village , any recommendation I make in relation to that village , if it is based on the general principle , must apply by analogy also to Skelton , and I would have little choice but to recommend to the councils that they may wish or indeed they should , reconsider this question of washing-over or insetting elsewhere .
23 And I 'll show you basically The the theory is that you go inside In fact I can show you with this this kind of window here .
24 You said to us that you left early in the evening , but according to other witnesses you left just an hour before midnight .
25 You have always preferred young voices : Schwarzkopf and Gedda on the 1952 recording of the B minor Mass that you made partly in Vienna with the Singverein and partly in London with the soloists .
26 It 's significant that you sit here in this house , so comfortably , calling my father by his first name while I have n't seen him since I was eight . ’
27 You can stand back in practical terms , too — suggesting a couple of hours ' break for people to clear their heads , or that you finish early in order for people to think over proposals and reconvene in the morning .
28 You can study any subject at ‘ A ’ level ; the important thing is that the subjects you study are academic and that you do well in them .
29 No , that you do well in your exams .
30 No , that you do well in your exams .
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