Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] with the [noun] [that] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | They will be so contaminated with the virus that there is nothing else to be done . |
2 | This does not entirely square with the view that politicians are potentially too ‘ knavish ’ to make decisions of any importance , but it was , I suspect , near the mark . |
3 | The new town is literally blooming with the growth that foreign investment has brought . |
4 | Dealers , debt collecting in pairs , were often so frustrated with the task that they did other things instead . |
5 | Since bilateral speech need not imply that speech functions are distributed equally between the hemispheres this does not necessarily conflict with the finding that the proportion of subjects showing a left ear advantage was highest among the strongly left handed . |
6 | Because i i they though it was in competition with other varieties around and it something t It was n't necessarily to do with the fact that erm they though it was less it held less prestige in the community . |
7 | The sinewy elegance of these figures is unusual , and has perhaps to do with the fact that the Aeginetan sculptors are recorded as preeminent in bronze . |
8 | It was apparently replaced with the claim that Edward 's children were illegitimate , because Edward , before his marriage to Elizabeth Woodville , had been betrothed to another woman . |
9 | It was apparently replaced with the claim that Edward 's children were illegitimate , because Edward , before his marriage to Elizabeth Woodville , had been betrothed to another woman . |
10 | He had become interested in the culture of the place as he ventured out and made new friends , youngsters in the industry who talked nothing else but films and stars , and was suddenly struck with the notion that he might become an actor . |
11 | It naturally combines with the view that individuals should develop freely to find for themselves the form of the good which they wish to pursue in their life . |
12 | I was so struck with the place that when I came back to Le Court I told John that he ought to go there for a visit . |
13 | When my right hon. Friend is making arrangements for his business in the second week in April , will he please include a visit to Edgware general hospital , where he will find patients , members of staff and doctors highly satisfied with the changes that have taken place in the national health service ? |
14 | I entirely agree with the importance that my hon. Friend attaches to manufacturing . |
15 | Was he so besotted with the woman that he could n't see the fallibility of what she was saying ? |
16 | By ( b ) I 'm not of course implying that I would necessarily agree with the judgement that pure theory is no use but I think that 's the way the students see it . |
17 | Not all will necessarily agree with the suggestion that those who fight in wars are historically more important than the wars themselves . |
18 | This morning Betty — my cleaner — came in bursting with the news that there was a brass plate outside . |
19 | Have you ever secretly flirted with the idea that it might be rather glamorous or exciting to be widowed young , to go blind , to have cancer or AIDS , to go bankrupt , to be burgled , to be a social outcast , to go crazy , to become homeless , to be a drug addict , even to commit suicide … ? |
20 | Ngo Van Dong and his younger brother , Hoc , huddled close together in the darkness in one of the long huts , their ragged clothes already saturated with the rain that streamed in through the inadequate thatch . |
21 | The answer did not finish with the statement that for all the natural beauty above ground , Lesotho had no wealth below . |
22 | He had not reckoned with the fact that the second charge of canister could not be fired . |
23 | The fact that the accused gave no thought to the risk of someone being deceived does not square with the requirement that he obtained by a deception . |
24 | In other words , their natural history does not fit with the explanation that has been repeated in textbooks for decade after decade . |
25 | Like most large cities , it can no longer cope with the traffic that blocks the city centre almost all day and the Mayor of Paris , Jaques Chirac , presented a plan to the city fathers yesterday to restore the capital to its residents . |
26 | From what you know or have heard about each one , can you say whether you are generally satisfied or not satisfied with the service that each one provides ? |
27 | In most of the prisons , corruption has become a way of life and inmates believe that without taking recourse to corrupt practices they can not cope with the culture that prevails . |
28 | The majority of people who have difficulty coming to terms with the death of a pet can not cope with the fact that the pet is actually dead . |
29 | If the reader was nevertheless left with the feeling that music counted for most , it was partly because the bulk of the long treatise was in fact about music and nothing else . |
30 | Clearly , therefore , there are large numbers of people whose life-styles do not connect with the dictum that ‘ the family is the unit of stratification ’ . |