Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] that [adj] [noun] [modal v] " in BNC.

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1 I share with my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister the hope that the Community will one day be able to enlarge its fold and that that enlargement will include some of the currently problematic countries of eastern Europe .
2 So even if we agree that abolition was his intention and that that intention would have failed , if we consider also that it was mistaken anyway , we need pursue the point no further , except to add this : granted that the evil of insufficiently regulated competition is that it leads ultimately to the vicious exploitation of employees , the point can hardly be made of industrial co-operatives .
3 Einstein perceived that there must be a direct link between the distribution of mass/energy and the curvature of space–time and that this link must be expressible in tensor form .
4 Therefore , Labour 's policy , as I understand it , is that only local councils should be allowed to run schools and that those schools should be inspected only by local government inspectors .
5 We consider it strange that adults ( teachers , parents , publishers of textbooks and examiners ) behave as if they believe both that manipulating fractions is a useful skill and that most children can acquire this skill .
6 Note that justices should ask for evidence of the time of sunset and sunrise where the exact time is in question and that this offence can be committed at any time .
7 In its report , the committee did not recommend any change in the law but that these matters should be left to the good sense and judgement ( hopefully ) of Cabinet ministers , utilising the Radcliffe guidelines .
8 Your directors consider that employees at all levels should be encouraged to identify their interests with those of the Company 's shareholders and that this objective can be furthered by providing means for employees to become shareholders themselves .
9 We believe that small and medium-sized companies , which tend to be the most innovative , will be persuaded to develop new technologies and that that investment will result in considerable leverage .
10 In 1348 they demanded free trade in wool , and in 1351 achieved a definitive victory when the king agreed that the maltote should be granted only in parliament and that all merchants should be permitted to deal in wool ‘ without being restricted by those merchants who call themselves the king 's merchants ’ .
11 Does the Secretary of State accept that if local government is to be local , it is essential that we do not repeat the mistakes of the 1973-74 reorganisation and that any reorganisation must be acceptable to local people ?
12 This phenomenon can also be seen in trading stamp transactions so that s4(1) of the Trading Stamps Act 1964 ( substituted by s16(1) of SOGIT 1973 ) provides : In every redemption of trading stamps for goods , notwithstanding any term to the contrary on which the redemption is made , there is — ( a ) an implied warranty on the part of the promoter of the trading scheme that he has a right to give the goods in exchange ; ( b ) an implied warranty that the goods are free from any charge or encumbrance not disclosed or known to the person obtaining the goods before , or at the time of redemption and that that person will enjoy quiet possession of the goods except so far as it may be disturbed by the owner or other person entitled to the benefit of any charge or encumbrance so disclosed or known ; ( c ) an implied warranty that the goods are of merchantable quality , except that there is no such warranty ( i ) as regards defects specifically drawn to the attention of the person obtaining the goods before or at the time of redemption ; or ( ii ) if that person examines the goods before or at the time of redemption , as regards defects which that examination ought to reveal .
13 The manager knows that the normal level of spending would leave the budget underspent and that this underspending will have to be forfeited with a possible consequent reduction in next year 's budget .
14 It has been found that there is a definite sequence of vegetation changes in the Post-glacial period and that these changes can be recognised over wide areas .
15 The first is the conclusion that it does not do any good for any delegation to stay away from any part of the process and that all parties should hang in there and keep the discussions going with as much momentum as possible .
16 He should also remain aware of the fact that conversation is a process and that each contribution should be treated as part of the negotiation of ‘ what is being talked about ’ .
17 However , some argued that it would be difficult to include the voluntary and direct grant colleges in such a body and that national planning would thereby be more complex .
18 A range of possible reasons has been put forward , stressing that it is important to get the right degree of capital intensity for the business and that many businesses may simply be misled by current profitability and push investment too far .
19 Thru subverts the literary theory which has as its premise that every narrative contains a meaning and that this meaning can be accounted for in terms of a universal ‘ elementary structure of signification ’ which posits woman as an object of exchange between men .
20 Market considerations would , therefore , dictate that among the owner occupiers , the upper socio-economic groups would not only be more likely to occupy detached housing than the lower socio-economic groups but that this disparity would be even wider than the one existing on simple tenure criteria .
21 They have come to the conclusion that , from the point of view of the welfare of the children , it is more important to the children that they should not be separated from each other than that either child should go to one of the grandmothers .
22 that the directors take primary responsibility for the information contained in all public documentation and that this information will be subject to verification .
23 Council leader Michael Carr said the authority had no faith in the fairness of the appeals procedure and that further delays would increase the burden on the borough 's poll tax payers .
24 Nevertheless , there was an Empire and an Emperor ; it followed that there must be a court and that this court must reflect the nature of the new regime .
25 There is no doubt that there will be teething problems and that some things will be thrown back at the International Board .
26 Perhaps if we look beyond superficial disagreements we may find that today 's men and women of influence share fundamental beliefs and that these beliefs can inspire a common approach to community care .
27 A report by Chinese scientists in the Chinese People 's Political Consultative Committee claimed , however , that flooding would not be effectively controlled , that silt would regularly incapacitate turbines and that 1,000,000 people would have to be moved .
28 The NAO says that ‘ early indications suggest significant under-declaration of income by farmers may extend beyond the original area and that some farmers may not be registered as taxpayers . ’
29 The prospect of a wider ranging enquiry emerged with the report suggesting ‘ significant under-declaration of income by farmers may extend beyond the original area and that some farmers may not be registered as taxpayers . ’
30 An editorial declared that the change of name signified a " steady trend towards a wider outlook " and heralded the fact " that teaching technology appears to be advancing on separate fronts and that these fronts could well be brought more closely together . "
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