Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [vb -s] in " in BNC.

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1 That she keeps in touch with ?
2 If she wants to find her relatives , I suggest that she looks in the villages .
3 Mary Leapor also knows that she lives in a dirty world .
4 Kathryn Cullen of Swansea is sure that she lives in some capacity in World War II .
5 Not that she believes in anything , religion and so on — and nor do I of course , though I was brought up a little as a Catholic — but she goes by omens , auguri .
6 ‘ Not only can we match any skin , from lightest to darkest , ’ he says , ‘ but we can give any woman the exact combination of texture , weight and coverage that she wants in a foundation or powder .
7 Should we not ask ourselves whether the adulteress had a bad family upbringing , lacking in love , that she reacts in this way ?
8 Once during the course of a conversation with a fellow teacher she expressed the difficultly that she experiences in ‘ selling membership ’ to class members because she felt that there was ‘ nothing to offer them . ’
9 Ways of getting Tony Dorigo 's mum to join the list — we are informed that she works in Brum for the computing industry 's equivalent of Leeds United , the multi-national giants Digital .
10 The rate of breakdown of organic detritus is only modest in the temperate grasslands , so that it accumulates in the soil .
11 That is , how to give a child a knowledge of what has been accepted as right and what has been accepted as wrong , or , in other words , of good and evil ; and further , how this can be so well rooted in their minds that it produces in them an inclination to act automatically in accordance with what must be designated civilised behaviour .
12 There is a striking analogy here with crystal growth , except that it happens in two dimensions , not three .
13 The predictions are supported by evidence that male dwarfism is an evolutionary strategy in solitary , sedentary animals , that it evolves in low population densities ( high search costs ) , and that it correlates with a female-biased adult sex ratio ( reduced male competition ) .
14 They have reported for example that fear of strangers may peak anywhere between 6 and 12 months ; that it varies in onset and intensity according to the child 's sex , its rank in the family , the number of people it meets regularly , its attachment to its mother and her responsiveness , and the age , size and sex of the stranger ; that it is different in the laboratory from at home .
15 First , that it operates in the real world where there would always be obstacles to giving every shade of opinion equal air time .
16 In 1990 Tesco made the Association the beneficiary of one of the six nationwide collections that it allows in its stores .
17 Echo still needs the connivance of an Apple to guarantee that it stays in synch with all system call releases .
18 The typical duration that it spends in either mode is very long compared with the source period .
19 That last phrase , presenting the savage mind as ‘ vanished ’ , yet suggesting that it continues in our own , is in line with Eliot 's refusal when discussing Lévy-Bruhl , to pin down just how the savage mind is related to the modern .
20 If ‘ it is raining ’ expresses the belief that it is raining , but says not that I , the speaker , have that belief , but simply that it is raining , it would appear that it differs in meaning from ‘ I believe that it is raining ’ .
21 One investigation aimed at characterisation of this response showed that it differs in the various colonic segments , with the proximal ones displaying brisk and less sustained contractile activity than the distal ones .
22 One final point to be remembered about contributory negligence is that it differs in effect from a finding of negligence .
23 Suppose also that , because it has a latent defect , the catapult is not of merchantable quality and that it breaks in use and injures the boy 's eye as a result .
24 What is truly radical about this innovation is that it intervenes in the quality of life at work , the culture shared between men and women workers , on the side of women .
25 If you observe the bird from the front , you 'll see that it ranges in hue from the creamy white of the breast and stomach to quite a dark brown with even darker flecks on the neck .
26 Whether the life sentence is regarded as a sufficient denunciation in society depends on the public 's perception of what life imprisonment means : if it is widely believed that it results in an average of nine years ' imprisonment , the effect will be somewhat blunted .
27 The main implications of age-barrier retirement are , first , that it results in an average fall in income of about a half .
28 For once I did n't take my beloved camera with me to record the state of the line , for the simple reason that it results in very slow progress , and that is hardly wise near the shortest day of the year .
29 despite its protestations , that it speaks in the name of individuals by shredding employment protection and undermining collectivism .
30 But in Britain , Thorn EMI owns the name Kenwood for electrical equipment — so Trio has to re-label all its ‘ Kenwood ’ equipment that it sells in Britain as ‘ Trio ’ .
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