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

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1 The movement of ions that depolarises part of the nerve cell membrane results in a potential difference between it and the part adjacent to it .
2 A new industry minister , Victor Joy Wa , took a third tack , announcing to startled industrialists that he will do away with all privileges for all manufacturers save exporters , who can expect reimbursement of taxes that ‘ should not be exported ’ .
3 As a consequence , the direct relationship between the cost calculation and the fixing of taxes that we have set up here is inapplicable .
4 It was a combination of inventions that proved to hold the secret to quality .
5 The aim of the business leader must be to be the best , for only the best command their own destiny and achieve the sort of rewards that are sought for themselves and their people .
6 It is sufficient here to recognize that individuals at work are motivated by the sorts of rewards that are available .
7 Difficulties of setting up a system of rewards that is directly linked to performance appraisal and the achievement of objectives .
8 And also er looking at the kind of rewards that erm an employee might benefit .
9 They teemed with wonders : individuals blessed with attributes that would have made them , in this , the Fifth Dominion , fit for sainthood , or burning , or both ; cults possessed of secrets that would overturn in a moment the dogmas of faith and physics alike ; beauty that might blind the sun , or set the moon dreaming of fertility .
10 For the time being , the practical effect of the change will be limited to accountants lobbying for a change in the law in the vast majority of states that do not permit accountants to incorporate — only Colorado , Hawaii , Kansas and Wyoming allow it at present .
11 The more expressive the language , the more possible states can be described in it ; and hence , the larger will be the space of states that a solver may have to search through for a goal .
12 A HMM is a collection of states that are connected by transitions .
13 The way in which DCs are processed by LIFESPAN is best explained by following the life cycle of states that a software modification passes through , from the time it is proposed until it is approved as a routine quality control activity .
14 The Bar was the sort of impenetrable club with its own set of values that the Thatcher administration instinctively distrusted .
15 Instead , our desires reflect the collection of values that we attach to our humanity .
16 This was , in fact , the same scale of values that initiated the work , since wealthy patrons were at liberty to specify the number of historiations and miniatures and paid accordingly .
17 To the extent that these arenas support and acknowledge people 's feelings and their search for greater clarity , they must presuppose a set of values that is different from the one which underlies the common staffroom ethos ; and after a while this clash of values may become explicit .
18 It follows from the existence of values that individuals will be evaluated and therefore placed in some form of rank order .
19 Spending time there and in Biella , I have a good balance of values that I like personally . ’
20 This is what we must be prepared to do if we are to achieve the vision of educational integration that reflects the kinds of values that deaf people would wish to see perpetuated .
21 The particular set of values that comes to be enshrined in a constitution or code reflects the preferences of the groups in power at the time of their drawing up .
22 The fabliaux as a whole clearly imply a system of values that in many respects is quite conventional , and it is one of these values that directs that the lecherous priest should be the type that suffers most from the poetic justice of these texts .
23 Where can you get training on one particular area of competence , or on the particular combination of competences that staff and managers need ?
24 An accident , in the sense that it could have been the ancestors of lions that took up grass-eating , and the ancestors of antelopes that took up meat-eating .
25 If people are exposed to the variety of opinions that normally exist in relation to any major issue , the likelihood of their being easily manipulated by unscrupulous opinion-makers is greatly reduced .
26 ( See further Appendix C. ) We shall offer many instances to show how interaction , between the relations within that construction and the semantic identity of individual words , governs the grammaticality and interpretation of phrases and sentences , and influences the range of adjectives that can occur in any one position .
27 As we have now seen , the latter supposition is by no means invariably true , and for this ( and other reasons which we shall come to later ) the ranges of adjectives that can be found in the two positions are actually substantially different .
28 The legitimate questions for a judge in his role as interpreter of the enacted law are : ‘ How has Parliament , by the words that it has used in the statute to express its intentions , defined the category of acts that are entitled to the immunity ?
29 Others think that the obligation is based on the sort of reasons that philosophers have adduced in support of an obligation to obey , which have been refuted by various writers in recent years , and will be briefly considered below .
30 ‘ But I was glad for a lot of reasons that you did n't aim true in the dyeyard . ’
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