Example sentences of "that [det] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Well I I say that that at the best I think it it 's just a question mark or a dash . |
2 | If I can just endorse what Stewart was saying the Parish Council talked to me as their consultant for a while and said look it seems that that with the with the actions of the er County Council writing to the Secretary of State to preempt the call-in procedures and the attitude of the District Council that this thing might well get local planning permission . |
3 | Erm within the limits of his repertoire he 'll shift his accent down towards that that of the workers erm shows them cooperation and that 's known as a downward convergence . |
4 | Erm I think that that in the same way as if we went down too low , could be considered to be er a change of strategy and I think what we 're about is to try and reflect the currently er approved structure plan strategy . |
5 | So do we understand from that that in the event it made only a few seconds difference , if at all ? |
6 | In the same way we can also define short periods of currency life ; it is from the composition of hoards that we know , for example , that neither of the two principal coinages of late twelfth- and thirteenth-century England , the Short Cross coinage of 1180–1247 and the Long Cross coinage of 1247–79 , survived in circulation after their production had stopped . |
7 | ‘ The problem is that neither of the two new systems being applied to our urban and rural services is suitable in the case of these long lengths of medium-use track , ’ says David Wilkinson , Regional Railways ' signalling and telecommunications engineer . |
8 | Kirk concluded that neither of the two methods showed superiority over the other . |
9 | There was a long , rather embarrassed silence during which Jack sensed that neither of the Shepherds believed a word they were saying , and were probably secretly scoffing at them . |
10 | The third possibility is that neither of the others can work . |
11 | The other major problem the region faced in trying to put together a strategy was that neither of the managing districts was actually convinced that it was feasible to provide a service completely devolved from the large hospitals . |
12 | The preceding discussion reaches the conclusion that neither of the dominant theories of contract achieves its aims of being an exposition of liberal philosophy . |
13 | A brave attempt , but ruined by the fact that neither of the elements are really up to much . |
14 | It is said that neither of the plaintiffs actually signed this acceptance , their apparent signatures being forgeries made by a person or persons unknown on behalf of the conspirators or their connected companies . |
15 | It is interesting to note that neither of the Palmotićs receives even a passing mention in Zvane Črnja 's standard Kulturna historija Hrvatske , although Jakita is described by Sir Arthur Evans as one of ‘ the most celebrated names in the long annals of Ragusan literature ’ and Junije is referred to by one English historian as ‘ the creator of the national drama ’ . |
16 | There can be no doubt that twenty-two years is a sounder regnal length for Penda than either ten or thirty and that neither of the two latter present a significant challenge to Bede 's figure . |
17 | More than one bid would probably be counter-productive because of the substantial danger that neither of the two bids would succeed . |
18 | The consequence is that neither of the two bands observed for the difluoride should be assigned to either of the expected group modes , the GeF 2 antisymmetric stretch and the GeH 2 rock ; both are due to whole-molecule modes ; with contributions from both group modes . |
19 | If you assume — as the Treasury does — that little of the original $128m debt owed to America by these countries would have been recovered anyway , this will cost the Treasury , over three years , the princely sum of $11m . |
20 | Surveys of less developed economies were , however , more confusing , with econometric studies suggesting that little of the growth in public spending could be explained' by rising incomes ( or low price elasticities ) . |
21 | In November 1990 the Ministry of Defence announced that not all of the 500,000-strong personnel of the NVA could be absorbed by the Bundeswehr , and that little of the large stock of weapons and munitions could be of use to the Bundeswehr . |
22 | The work is founded on the principle that each of the dead should be commemorated individually by name either on the headstone on the grave or by an inscription on a memorial . |
23 | Hence Jacques Derrida 's influential concept of ‘ différance ’ ( translated in English as at once difference and deferral ) , a concept enabling us to ‘ reconsider all the pairs of opposites on which philosophy is constructed and on which our discourse lives , not in order to see opposition erase itself but to see what indicates that each of the terms must appear as the différance of the other , as the other different and deferred in the economy of the same ’ . |
24 | The National Government had been allotted a definite task , and on its completion it is understood that Parliament should be dissolved as soon as circumstances permit , and that each of the parties should be left free to place its policy before the electors for their approval . |
25 | Reasonable people will decide that each of the Madrid conditions has been met . |
26 | What was most striking about the CMHTs , however , was that each of the teams sought to become involved with people with learning disabilities primarily in order to achieve planned changes in lifestyles , choices and opportunities . |
27 | Often these people believed that each of the components of nature — the forest , the rivers , the sky — was occupied and guarded by a jealous god , and they behaved as if that were the case . |
28 | Israel 's God would be unique only in the sense that each of the gods on Mount Olympus is unique , with a particular history of actions and involvement in the human world . |
29 | Gradually it was established that each of the many kinds of virus consisted of a core of a nucleic acid , either ribonucleic acid ( RNA ) or deoxyribonucleic acid ( DNA ) ( see Chapter II ) , with a protein coat . |
30 | He was quite right to claim that each of the four cells at the end of the cleavage would form a normal larva . |