Example sentences of "in [det] [subord] " in BNC.

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1 Iron is present in each as traces , but even so provides useful markers .
2 Well what I might do is just put one soap in each cos it
3 Yes that was more like it , you had a friend in that so you ran along the train trying to find her .
4 I 'll grant you were in a bad state , which was hardly surprising after all the business with losing your part and then Lesley-Jane going off with Micky — incidentally , there was less in that than you thought , but that 's by the way .
5 There 's less fun in that than the Ideal Home mail order offer to pamper your bottom , at least if you 're a cyclist .
6 There 's more skill in that than there is the discus .
7 Definitely on the motorway in that than the stupid Mini !
8 The LM form of homœopathic medication is unusual in that once you are improving on the remedy you actually continue to take it even when you are feeling well .
9 They differ from connotative terms like ‘ metal ’ — and to this extent ‘ are in the same condition as proper names ’ — in that whereas to the question , ‘ What are the things the resemblance to which you mark by calling this thing a ‘ metal ’ ? ’ the answer , ‘ Things of which it is true that their oxide dissolved in water yields an alkaline solution ’ can be given ; to the question , ‘ What are the things the resemblance to which you mark by calling this sensation ‘ a sensation of white ’ ? ’ the only answer that can be given is , ‘ Sensations to which I have given the name ‘ a sensation of white ’ ’ , an answer that does not ‘ unfold the signification of this class of names ’ .
10 They differ in that whereas the component of the gravitational field associated with J 2 has one zero per quadrant , the component associated with J 4 has two .
11 Why functions in almost opposite fashion to how , however , in that whereas the most common use with the latter involves taking for granted the existence of the means ( how to ) , the former is used with the infinitive exclusively in cases where the speaker is questioning the existence of any good reason to perform the event denoted by the infinitive : ( 46 ) Why bother to reply ?
12 Like everyone else , I became equally at home with both systems , and I was doubly fortunate in that while I was still a student the metric system changed from being ‘ cgs ’ based ( centimetres , grams , seconds ) to ‘ MKS ’ based ( Metres , Kilograms , Seconds ) .
13 They differ , however , in that while Jewson claims that hospital medicine superseded ‘ bedside medicine ’ , Armstrong sees the latter , ‘ biographical medicine ’ , as he names it , as remaining in exchange relationships between hospital doctors and general practitioners to re-emerge in recent years as a separate , but not necessarily subservient specialism .
14 Morishima ( 1982 ) has identified a major difference between Chinese and Japanese Confucianism , in that while the former stresses humanistic benevolence , the latter places much more emphasis on loyalty and duty to seniors in the hierarchy of authority .
15 Discussion of the inter-war years usually centres on industrial change , but North Shields resembles the rest of the North East here in that while it is true that the 1920s saw a good deal of structurally induced unemployment which reflected the position of traditional basic industries , and the 1930s saw the impact of work recession , these same basic industries began to recover in the run up to the Second World War in the mid-1930s and were to remain basic to the area until the early 1960s .
16 It was generally agreed that there was a difference between human science and the knowledge of God , in that while human knowledge was concerned with that which reason could analyse , theology was concerned with the way in which the transcendent love of God is known .
17 ‘ Wrap yourself in that while I change the sheets . ’
18 One of the accusations used and levelled against er against Christianity against the , the evangelical message , against things like the , the mission of Graham and , and others is that it , it does n't meet the needs the , the material needs of people but if you deal with the persons spiritual needs , if their sins are forgiven , those problems that are causing the material problem , it 's amazing how there are dealt with as well , the best way to sober up a person , the best way to deal with a person who 's an alcoholic , the best way to deal with a person who is a drug addict , the best way to deal with a person who , who commits adultery is not by telling them the wrongs of those things , it 's not by trying to , to , to do , to , to , you know , to , to counsel them it 's presenting the gospel allowing Jesus Christ to come into their lives and to forgive them , that will make the person sober quicker than all the counselling in the world and Paul says I brought you the most important the fundamental thing , that Christ died for our sins Paul again when he 's writing to the Romans in chapter five and verse eight he says but God demonstrates his own love towards us , in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us so God did in Jesus Christ what we could n't do for ourselves , so all of you have sin , so all of my sin , and he came and he died on the cross and as he was dying there was that transmit there , for he was n't dying for his own sin buy he was dying for your sin and for mine , it was all piled on him and so when we except what Christ has done , when we come to that place and yes I believe that you died for me ,
19 Green 's memorandum reflected the WEA 's dissatisfaction with its original 1932 representation on the RAC in that although the District was recognised by the Board of Education as the most important providing body for Chapter III courses in the region , it had less than 25% of the committee 's membership which thus failed to recognise the WEA 's national or regional status .
20 In the case of the APT , the approach is diametrically opposite in that although it derives a causal relationship , it does not identify the determinant factors .
21 Had a bit of difficulty in finding my feet , sexually , as it were , in that although prostitutes were twenty a penny , the kind of up-market lovelies that I favoured were harder to locate .
22 A single gene may be responsible in that although the identical twin concordance rate is only 40–50 per cent , there has been some suggestion that the other twin often has some schizoid features of personality which may be the same disease in a much milder form ( Emery , 1975 ) .
23 ‘ But they seem to trust in the power of the nine-tailed whip , and they will continue in that until a regiment breaks out of its barracks and makes its own way home . ’
24 The clip is dual-purpose in that as well as holding the slate in position , it also secures it against wind uplift which is a possible cause of the original slippage .
25 This is thought to reflect our evolutionary history in that as the head became larger , the development of the anterior somites was modified .
26 Tokenism , as this ‘ women 's season ’ showed , can be useful in that as well as making a gesture towards ‘ minority ’ interest it at the same time betokened the absence of women 's film on television which it sought to undo .
27 For all the subjection , the limitation of opportunity , many no doubt ruled their husbands as well as their households in that as in all ages ; great ladies may often have run the estate when the lord was away on campaign .
28 I would have been quite happy just to have been on the bench for the entire championship but , as it turned out , I had another big incentive in that as Gary might not play for the rest of the Five Nations there would be four internationals available if I proved good enough ’ .
29 That 's where it all comes confusing cos there is things in there which still ascertains the shock in that as well as the other
30 I 've sent them a big consignment of wine , I 'm in that as well as the grocery , and I 'd love to know how it 's selling . "
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