Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [vb -s] that [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The display territory must be at least as large as the floor area of your tank — and so yours undoubtedly supposes that any female who visits him is ready to spawn . |
2 | Apparently they 're up to here in woolies , but nobody ever remembers that homeless men need underpants too . |
3 | That agriculture has to be shown to be necessary for the viability of Article 3(5) areas is stated in the House of Commons ' Agriculture Committee 's 1982 Report which also states that such areas must have a low or declining population , the exact opposite of the view given by MAFF ) . |
4 | Nobody now supposes that political processes begin and end with elections , or that elected governments have a monopoly of political power . |
5 | In responses to a recent questionnaire from members of Age Concern England 's governing body , it was notable that few saw concessionary entitlement to services as discriminatory and patronising , only necessary in a society which implicitly recognises that older people are not treated fairly . |
6 | In a regional study including about 10% of the Danish population we found the population relative risk of ulcerative colitis and Crohn 's disease among first degree relatives of patients with either disease to be about 10 , which strongly suggests that these disorders have a genetic cause . |
7 | , Pm ) on the right gives which again shows that neither player can improve his position by unilaterally adopting a different strategy . |
8 | There was some authority for this but the matter is now governed by section 11(1) of the Torts ( Interference with Goods ) Act 1977 which firmly states that contributory negligence is no defence in proceedings founded on conversion , or on intentional trespass to goods . |
9 | ONE OF THE anomalies of National Hunt racing this season is the comparative paucity of winners for the artistic Richard Dunwoody , the jockey who most resembles that supreme stylist John Francome among the current crop of riders . |
10 | As a teenager she had been frail and very light , and although now she is two stone heavier , and healthier for it , she still believes that young women should be thin , even skeletally so . |
11 | Several other libraries have expressed strong interest , and she confidently expects that other subscribers will shortly follow Aberdeen 's innovative lead . |
12 | She also suggests that this mechanism was reversed in the 1970s , by which time more mothers were taking up employment between births , which would be likely to encourage longer gaps between babies . |
13 | She also suggests that this fear , and women 's predominantly domestic , private , work experiences , generate an affinity between women and conservatism . |
14 | But she also knows that relative shifts in demand occur and that these too can lead to her price being higher than the average . |
15 | But , despite her comfort , she never forgets that other people do n't always have it so easy that life can be hard . |
16 | When one further considers that all electors in Scotland and in non-metropolitan England and Wales have services provided by two different types of council , then the image of a clear and direct line of accountability between elector and local authority begins to evaporate . |
17 | However , one also suspects that other researchers have underplayed the difficulties of their field-work in order to avoid pejorative assessments of their results . |
18 | But no one seriously suggests that American Indians taught the Egyptians about civilisation , or vice versa . |
19 | It effectively says that these computers understand English . |
20 | It only means that certain sets of economic processes are more referrent to a local area than others . |
21 | Sleight apologised for this state of affairs at the Congress in Dublin in 1895 : " It must be remembered that it is exceedingly difficult for the executive committee to meet together often , for every time they do so they have to bear their own travelling expenses , and sometimes hotel expenses ; and to whatever centre they are summoned , it only means that some members of the committee have to travel a considerable distance . |
22 | It so happens that other chemists , supporting more conventional organic ‘ primeval soup ’ theories , have long accepted that clay minerals would have been a help . |
23 | It so happens that this rate is exactly the output of the building industry , averaged over the previous three years . |
24 | ( If it so happens that yellow wallpaper does take away your appetite , then for you it is relevant . ) |
25 | He only recommends that Public Assistance Committees might be approached , but makes it optional and not obligatory . |
26 | Though he rightly acknowledges that large parts of the country were unaffected by this enclosure movement , his concentration on it gives us a somewhat unbalanced picture . |
27 | None of this , however , should be interpreted as implying that Semai are callous or indifferent to the welfare of their neighbours and kin , which is certainly not the case ; it merely demonstrates that another person 's problems and affairs are pre-eminently his own ; ‘ hal mai , hal mai ; hal hii ’ , hal hii' ’ is the apposite aphorism : ‘ their affairs are theirs ; our affairs are ours . ’ |
28 | It just says that some parts of the business will throw off cash surpluses , that it may well not be worth investing further in those businesses , and that , in that case , the funds can be used to further investment elsewhere . |
29 | It just shows that 1 goal is not enough , especially where leeds are concerned . |
30 | By concession , rental income from surplus business accommodation is taxed under Sch D , Case I rather than Sch A. The Inland Revenue has commented that it normally accepts that current account and trade interest qualify for relief under s 393(8) , ICTA 1988 , as , under certain circumstances , will interest from the temporary lodgement of part of the current working capital in a bank deposit account . |