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

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1 Training all technicians throughout the country was an onerous task , but Sandra Hannington , Caroline Mytton and Anthony Dracott ensured that everyone received personal tuition , and the day that the various branches ‘ went live ’ the skills were all put to use .
2 Am I so negligible , she asked herself indignantly , that everyone feels this compulsion to speak for me ?
3 The problem is , however , that it is of little help in producing a list of user needs : the temptation would be to say either that everyone requires the same information or that everyone requires different information ; the former would make the exercise redundant and the latter would make it impossible to handle .
4 Remember , though , that everyone makes more mistakes in copying than in original writing , so you may end up with more errors in the rewritten piece than in the original .
5 Patients in and around Exeter can use the cards to present to doctors , dentists and hospitals so that everyone has easy access to their medical history .
6 Traditional building materials such as mud will have a role to play only when the national objective is to ensure that everyone has better housing now .
7 The chairman will also have to organize the panel during the interview , making sure that everyone has sufficient time to ask their questions but without allowing the process to get out of hand and overrun .
8 She knew nothing of the future other than that it was an inhospitable fog that no-one had any choice but to enter , but she was certain that there was a scene all laid-out and waiting for her where she brought in the name of the man — or woman — who 'd first talked to Chrissie and then run her down .
9 I take it that no-one claims exclusive rights in this field .
10 ‘ It is simply that I expected better service , ’ he snapped .
11 Nibbles is an interesting one that I played one night and I was going cor !
12 It was at Seto More 's house on Jervis Street that I experienced Chinese hospitality at first hand .
13 Before passing to it , I should say that I heard oral evidence from Mr. Mahmoud , called on behalf of C.T. , and from Mr. Joseph Kasner , the director of the landlord .
14 So bleak are the prospects that I heard one media journalist muttering that the ITC ought not to be advertising the franchise at all .
15 The last time that I heard that argument so brazenly presented was by Mr. Neville Chamberlain 's spokesman before the war .
16 ‘ It 's a bit like the cry that I heard last night ! ’ she thought .
17 The document was in the name of Mustafa Ibn Assaad Shihada Zamzam , Mrs Zamzam 's husband , and when she saw that I recognised this type of British mandate deed Mrs Zamzam 's face lit up as if a great discovery had been made .
18 Those of us who witnessed the touch-and-go progress of an ultimately triumphant War and Peace — recorded by Philips for release early next year — feared for the future of the rest , but as Gergiev puts it ‘ that which makes me incredibly proud is that I announced these things and they happened ’ — and , one might add , that inspiration was to hand for rather more performances than the fiercely self-critical Gergiev might admit .
19 IT was in July that I announced Leeds-born superchef Marco-Pierre White was to marry his second wife , beautiful 19-year-old London model Lisa Butcher , after a whirlwind courtship .
20 The House will be aware that I announced last month the principles that I am minded to adopt next year in considering whether planned expenditure is excessive or has increased excessively .
21 And he 'd have to put that I remember one man that was counting like this , he used to count them by the three you know .
22 ‘ That 's not my style , Ian — you should realise that I set great store by not creating ‘ scenes ’ ; by not making those that I esteem suffer any unnecessary discomfort , whether it be social , physical , or otherwise . ’
23 The L N E R and L M S. And er I could see then that I knew that superintendent in the private days of the railways .
24 If we also assume that my neighbour assumed that I knew these facts about the world , and that I interpreted her words according to the co-operative principle , then we can also see why the way she actually phrased her request is not only true and relevant , but also brief and clear .
25 Not that I knew any foreigners , though I recall thinking that there were two kinds .
26 Oh I did n't notice that I saw that thing in the car but I did n't notice a bracket .
27 you know the big spread that I saw that time
28 I remember now that I saw neat features , a nose a little hooked , and a very good figure .
29 ‘ It must sometimes be the case that I bring British fish back to London , but it will probably be in better condition than if it had been bought there as foreign agents insist on good transport and packing . ’
30 ‘ The end result is that I 've large arrears on the centre 's mortgage , and now the building society is threatening repossession in the new year , unless we can clear the arrears .
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