Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] that [prep] [det] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | This shows that for each sales area there may be a number of representatives . |
2 | Tony Benn is right to be dismayed at the talk of ‘ firework displays bigger than the Fourth of July ’ , but he 's wrong to deny that on some level this is what war has become . |
3 | You can then use this to ensure that on each wall your tiles will be centred accurately on major features such as window reveals , with a border of cut tiles of equal width at each side . |
4 | As this medical view is based fundamentally on the gender identity and self-image of the transsexual , he implies that the law is prepared to concede that in most circumstances sex determination is a matter for the individual . |
5 | This meant that on some occasions they would be conducted by Busacher , on others by Anton , the old répétiteur , and in emergencies by their own lead violinist . |
6 | This meant that for some countries the CET was lower than national tariffs . |
7 | This meant that in each case a secondary modern school which would have been too small to survive was absorbed quietly and without fuss into the grammar school , which did not bother to change its name . |
8 | This meant that in some cases people were now cultivating a single furrow on a field . |
9 | This implies that for any investment asset the marginal rate of exchange between the expected return and the risk ( standard deviation ) of that asset must be equal to the marginal rate of exchange for the market as a whole . |
10 | This means that at any frequency , sound waves in water are nearly five times as long as they would be in air , and so provide poorer resolution . |
11 | This means that at any frontier anywhere in the world a border official who has at his disposal a piece of equipment which is already widely and internationally available will be able instantaneously to record the personal details from a passport without the holder realising it , and the record will be automatically read into and stored by a computer . |
12 | And this means that for such sentences meaning is determinate and translation is determinate ; we can hope to find a sentence in another language with exactly matching assent conditions . |
13 | This means that for any claim by a researcher , a warrant must be produced by demonstrating a relevant response by the participants within the conversation itself . |
14 | This means that in all states where they are evaluated , unc ( say ) is always strictly larger than |
15 | This means that in many ways we become like God , and yet in others we remain unlike him . |
16 | This means that in such areas as environmental science the National Library is unique in Scotland in having collections covering all aspects of environmental issues , from ecology to legislation . |
17 | This means that in some areas water from the mains may have to be treated chemically to neutralize the additives before it is safe for fish . |
18 | This means that in some cases , the HE speaker must " lose " or neutralise a contrast which is normally expressed in HE . |
19 | This means that in most cases it is more likely to be a matter of relaxing the forward pressure to allow the aircraft to level out rather than pulling it out with a positive backward pressure on the stick . |
20 | It is probably patronising to say that in both cases the window dressing is up to Kensington standards , but it is . |
21 | This provides that notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in the articles ( so that no changes in the company 's constitution are required ) , one member present in person or by proxy shall be a quorum . |
22 | Mates estimated that the total uncovered foreign exchange liabilities of the banks at the end of 1985 amounted to $ 12.5 billion , and this suggests that at that time their total gross liabilities were substantially larger than $ 14 billion . |
23 | This suggests that in this example the role of the first segment ( the original ) is to provide assumptions which facilitate the understanding of the second ( the reformulation ) . |
24 | The invention of printing in the fifteenth century steadily did away with the need for handwritten books , and it is interesting to note that from that time onwards various styles of calligraphy developed for different purposes . |
25 | Mr McArdle wrote : ‘ It is sad to report that in this case the behaviour of the Daily Mirror and its staff did not contribute in any way to the detection of crime . |
26 | However , the Middle East Economic Digest of Oct. 26 noted that in some quarters it was being interpreted as " a gambit to force parliament to commute the sentences , thereby improving Turkey 's international image " . |
27 | People do leave something of themselves behind in the houses they 've lived in , the Japanese recognize that in some way , I do n't know how . |
28 | To put it differently , if spatiotemporal relations are to be appealed to in support of the thesis that there can be numerically , not just qualitatively , distinguishable ontological existents , it is necessary , in the first place , to clarify the conditions under which such relations can be significantly claimed to reflect the structure of an objective world , and in trying to do so we are likely to find that in some form or other we need to assume what such relations are supposed to explain . |
29 | We asked after Pop and were glad to hear that at that time he was still well . |
30 | As Larry Lytle , the main spokesman for USL puts it : ‘ USL understands that it is naive to believe that in any merger nothing changes . |