Example sentences of "[that] such [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The major television stations , in looking towards a mass audience , will inevitably focus on more dramatic events and issues in their depiction of the subject , and one 's only hope is that such depictions will be balanced and sensitively written .
2 The case for a compulsory examination at 16+ seems increasingly weak ( and the fact that such examinations are not mentioned in the Secretary of State 's prospective for his newly invented Technology Colleges may reflect this ) .
3 We may , following Hirsch , accept that there is no such thing as a poetic or aesthetic essence ; but we can say that such texts are rewarding when approached in aesthetic terms , or , in Lewis 's words , are read in literary ways .
4 That this had always been in the interest of Great Britain did not alter the fact that such interventions had tended since 1815 to favour liberal and nationalist causes .
5 The issue is whether or not there should be a strong framework and organizational commitment to instruments of public policy or whether or not there is a belief that such interventions are illegitimate and best left to the mysterious movements of market forces .
6 If a reader feels that such minutiae are unimportant , writers , at least , have not .
7 It is agreed that an appropriate vehicle for the transport of the plaintiff in the future is a vehicle called a Nissan Serena , the plaintiff claims for a cost of conversion of such a vehicle at six thousand , two hundred pounds , it would need to be renewed of course from time to time and allowances made for that , the defendant says that a firm called can convert the same vehicle for less than the tenth of the price , six hundred pounds , Mr says that such advantages , if any , of the conversion for which the plaintiff claims are so minimal that it can not possibly be right to spend ten times the money on achieving them .
8 The Council may also from time to time promulgate Codes of Practice if it is of the opinion that such codes will further the objects of the Council .
9 At Great Dunmow , for instance , it has been suggested that such strips were up to c. 100 m ( 327 ft ) deep , while the Fosse Way southwest of Ilchester was lined by two successive rows of enclosures some 50 by 20 m ( 165 by 66 ft ) in size .
10 The regulations state specifically that such investigations shall be held in private , and this sometimes leads to misunderstanding .
11 Other points of conflict between the two countries included the reluctance of the US administration to allow India to buy certain items of advanced technology , including a " supercomputer " and defence items , because of fears that such grants would breach technology transfer restrictions and perhaps lead to the items falling into the hands of the Soviet Union through India 's close ties with that country [ see p. 34947 ] .
12 George Watson , responding to this proposal , asserted that such topics were inappropriate for a course leading to a degree called " English " , and in any case dismissed both marxism and structuralism as outmoded " intellectual dinosaurs " : " No doubt a university is the place to study discredited intellectual systems ; but we risk derision if we propose them to the exclusion of others . "
13 Does he agree that such initiatives help to give young people a better start and help to provide the type of recruits needed by industry ?
14 In the Gravelle and Katz model then , there is scope for a potential improvement in performance to be induced by constraints on the firm , despite the fact that such constraints can lead to other distortions .
15 The development of object-oriented processing techniques reflects the fact that such constraints were widespread .
16 It is necessary to decide upon a citation order so that such documents are classified in a consistent manner .
17 Yet many theories based on black holes proceed on the tacit assumption that such objects exist in the Universe .
18 Bourdieu wished to retain what we have learnt from structural analysis , and yet to mitigate its objectivist implications by emphasizing that such structures produce not rules but dispositions , and underlie not determinacy but strategy .
19 He demonstrated that there is an abundance of ‘ remote ’ sites , in contrast to the official view that such sites were increasingly hard to find .
20 The burial of sites by volcanic eruptions happens without warning , so that such sites are like very well-preserved time capsules .
21 Since aerial photography of cropmarks has now shown that such sites are widespread , particularly beneath a number of later hillforts and in numerous river valleys , most parts of southern Britain may well have been within the territory of , and exploited by , one or other of these sites in Neolithic times .
22 Anderson argues strongly that such patterns can be explained only by looking at the material advantages and disadvantages of people living together .
23 The putting together of a record of achievement and the formative use of assessment at every stage of schooling should mean that such patterns of feedback as well as prediction would in time be developed as would cross the divide between primary , secondary , sixth form , tertiary college , FE and higher education .
24 In view of the conclusions of the last chapter , it is likely that such patterns will be archaic and also confused by local fluctuations in dispersal agents and this may be exacerbated in regions of geological instability , e.g. New Guinea with confusing variation patterns as in the tree Chisocheton lasiocarpus ( Meliaceae ) and the herbaceous Impatiens hawkeri ( Balsaminaceae ) .
25 Breathing exercises can certainly be helpful and the average athlete or singer would be somewhat limited without the control that such exercises bring .
26 Nuclear Electric is keen to stress that such exercises demonstrate how safety conscious the industry is .
27 What is surprising , however , is that such stories are told using the same , or very nearly the same , language .
28 Thorndyke argued that such stories are easy to remember because they have a particular structure .
29 Their own stories had strangely interlocked , and sometimes she had a sense that such interlockings were part of a vaster network , that there was a pattern , if only one could discern it , a pattern that linked these semi-detached houses of Wanley with those in Leeds and Northam , a pattern that linked Liz 's vast house in Harley Street with the Garfield Centre towards which she herself now drove .
30 It involves , for example , some consideration of the overall aims or purpose of a course , though this does not necessarily mean that such aims have to be explicitly formulated or prespecified .
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