Example sentences of "that they [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 Empowering local communities , that 's what really frightens the Tories , because what it means is they 'll never be able to come back with those repressive and regressive policies that they brought in two years ago .
2 The good standing of the exams , and thus — in the long run — of the profession itself , depends heavily on individuals ' willingness to put something back into the qualification from which they have benefited , and on the support that they receive in this endeavour from their employing organisations .
3 The announcements made by the Minister for Overseas Development a few minutes ago about the food situation were welcome , but people in Africa are starving and the terms of trade that they receive in their dealings with the developed countries , the problem of their huge indebtedness to the developed countries and the world order over which we now preside are such that hundreds of millions of people live on the edge of catastrophe .
4 If the process of nursing is seen as a problem-solving activity in which the nurse acts on her own initiative generating her own solutions , rather than one in which she repeats ready-made solutions ; and if the reasoning of the cognition theorists is accepted as valid ; then the teaching of nursing should be organised in such a way that the student not only acquires the necessary knowledge and skills , but does so in such a way that they develop in her flexible cognitive structures .
5 He saw that they kept in their lines , with their helms and weapons in reach , and went back to the awning his servants had raised with a bench under it , and some saddles .
6 But does n't every band from that area maintain that they met in the Hacienda ?
7 Some still retained private property as is evidenced by the fact that they met in private houses and that they would sell their assets if people were seen to be in need .
8 Gilfoyle 's friend , Sandra Davies , had earlier told the jury that they met in May , 1991 , at the Murrayfield Hospital in Thingwall where they both worked .
9 ‘ Provided , ’ Nicholas said , ‘ that they take in the wagons tomorrow . ’
10 It was only when Dexter parked the car back at the Yard that they noticed in the paintwork of the boot two long , deep scratches .
11 Scent 's fresh and there are the ends of those little white sticks that they burn in their mouths .
12 ‘ Tell them that they waited in the dark for us ? ’
13 It would appear that they formed in order to capitalise on certain perceived economic benefits .
14 ' However eager sceptical Victorians might be to replace the superstitious world of their forefathers with a structure that seemed to them more solid and more rational , the alternative , namely that they lived in a meaningless world of chance , was repellent to many of them .
15 I used to take them home on quite a number of occasions if I 'd known that they lived in the immediate vicinity .
16 Everybody knew that they lived in a ‘ planned economy ’ and they also knew who , in the final analysis , drew up the plan .
17 They could never forget , he told his audience in his 70th anniversary speech later in the year , that they lived in a multinational state .
18 Notwithstanding their competition and confrontation , both capitalist and socialist countries were coming to appreciate that they lived in an ‘ interdependent , in many ways integral world ’ in which they must cooperate for their common benefit .
19 They claimed that they lived in Walton village .
20 Moreover I do not think that it can be said that they succeed in righting the imbalance in the symbolism of Christianity .
21 The selection of these particular texts is on the grounds that they succeed in overcoming a dualistic representation of the relationship between the human subject and culture by avoiding reductionism ( either to the external world , as in behaviourism , or to the given subject , as in essentialism ) .
22 He uttered a great cry of anger and shame , without words , and then the words came following , so hotly that they burned in his throat :
23 Such categories naturally facilitate interaction within linguistic communities and inhibit interaction between communities to the extent that they differ in their conceptual and communicative economies .
24 Slowed down to the frequencies that suit our ears you can hear that they differ in volume , length , pitch and frequency and include squeals and yelps , grunts and trills .
25 Such patients often differ only in the time taken to reach hospital , and to claim that they differ in any more fundamental way is pure sophistry .
26 Their holders would adopt the same position of relative irrelevance that they hold in the republican democracies of Europe .
27 But we know that people disagree to some extent about the right principles of behaviour , so we distinguish that requirement from the different ( and weaker ) requirement that they act in important matters with integrity , that is , according to convictions that inform and shape their lives as a whole , rather than capriciously or whimsically .
28 They are aware of the need to improve their length so much that they put in the extra line so they are looking at a 1 or 1.5m ( 4 or 5ft ) area .
29 Mind you it was only their wages are only comparable to say some wages that they get in nuclear power station .
30 Roman as well as non-Roman popes , Italian as well as foreigners , all felt that they belonged in Rome .
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