Example sentences of "that [pron] [vb -s] [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For this , we assume that nothing changes after the first T periods .
2 I gather that nothing remains of the site today .
3 In order to ensure that everyone keeps to the laws there are specific penalties , such as fines or imprisonment , for those found guilty of breaking the law .
4 The drawback is the cost of insisting that everyone goes for the same type of equipment .
5 That this has not come about indicates either that everyone benefits from the system — which pluralist writers show is patently not so or that the democratic and neutral state is in fact nothing of the sort and that the scope for reform is severely limited .
6 The project outline claims that no-one lives in the inner zones , although this is disputed by local non-governmental organizations ( NGOs ) , which insist that tribal people currently use all of the forest .
7 It is n't every day that someone starts on the ground floor and ends up by being made a director of the firm .
8 This introduces a factor 2 – so that which reduces to the previous result for the random array .
9 So , the fact that who works in the green grocers is just a bit of additional information , it 's not necessary for the the main part of the sentence , you can take it out and it 's not going to take , make any difference to the construction or the meaning of the sentence , it 's a bit of additional information .
10 ‘ But no one can know that who breathes upon the earth . ’
11 Since this is the nature of the economic environment within which the agent operates it is rational for the agent to use that information about her environment to draw inferences from the information that she has about the current state of the economy , that is to solve her signal extraction problem .
12 But where she differs from Miss Finlay Johnson is that she looks beyond the facts to more universal implications of any particular topic .
13 If she wants to find her relatives , I suggest that she looks in the villages .
14 Our Agent advises that we indicate that £25,000 is the lowest acceptable offer and that she pays for the alteration .
15 ‘ It 's now a tradition that she comes for the last week of the campaign , ’ he says .
16 What steps have been taken by the CITB to ensure a maximum register of employers and that none slips through the net ?
17 The actual administration of services authorized by Acts is a process that itself contributes to the making of social policy .
18 The prosody of Dame Sirith may be unobtrusive , but as such it represents a smooth and polished performance that itself contributes to the tone of the work .
19 so that one goes to the right and this one goes to the left
20 Haitink is not one given to lofty poetics ( try the decidedly unmagical , if immaculately balanced gossamer string texturing of [ iii ] ) , nor outbursts of uncontrollable excitement ( close of [ i ] ) , yet the fact that one arrives at the finale with one 's emotions reasonably intact pays dividends in the long-term , especially as the conductor and the BPO ( on stunning form , incidentally ) raise the emotional temperature several notches for this glorious movement .
21 ‘ Are you all right ? ’ she asked in the lowered tone that one uses in the darkness .
22 It is a group based on matrilineal descent , which means that one belongs to the group because one 's mother belonged to it and not because of the identity of the father , since this can not be known .
23 It is these metaphorical journeys that one sees on the walls of their tombs : the dead sailing the river in search of a promise .
24 Again he had the impression that she was a young girl , for there was a smoothness about her skin that one sees in the young before the face reaches the border of adulthood .
25 What one hopes , of course , is to find that one comes to the same conclusions from using the neuropsychological method as from using psychological methods of investigation : and , as we will show in Chapter 9 , such agreements between conclusions do actually occur .
26 The movies tackled society on the broadest front and refused to be confined to any one social zone but for all that one senses from the trade papers and social surveys that the industry had become preoccupied with its fashionable down-town audiences and that the super-cinemas were thought of as the social cutting edge of the trade .
27 It is to the Standard that one looks for the first record of all .
28 Perhaps the best known exponent of this model of general education in the UK is Hirst ( 1969 ; 1974 ) , but it is familiar in most countries , and results in the relatively academic type of secondary school curriculum that one finds in the English grammar school , the French Lycée or the German Gymnasium , with appropriate national differences of emphasis ( the English have always stressed ‘ process ’ rather than ‘ breadth ’ ) .
29 To assume that everything turns on the exchanging of benefits is to cast an unwarranted slur on many honourable , and sometimes courageous , public officials .
30 It goes without saying that everything depends on the nature of the piece of music to be scored .
  Next page