Example sentences of "[vb -s] a [noun sg] that [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Yet he has a problem that most video pulpiteers do not .
2 Socialism has a dogma that private enterprise is wrong .
3 Once again , Ayer highlights an error that some philosophers have made , and which Anselm certainly made in his famous argument for the existence of God ( which I will examine later ) .
4 It allows a choice that other countries do not have .
5 It allows a choice that other countries do not have .
6 Peck quotes a tradition that these bull runnings began in the reign of Queen Mary ‘ in imitation of the Protestants who were hem 'd in with Faggots and burnt to Death ’ .
7 Those demands , he says , will constantly take the group into new areas and he sees a liklihood that major parts of the product range will change completely at least every decade .
8 This includes a reminder that any person caught swearing must be made to pay for it .
9 In the absence of such memorandum or the registration of a petition or receiving order in bankruptcy against any of the joint tenants in HM Land Charges Registry , a purchaser of the legal estate is entitled to treat the survivor as solely and beneficially interested if that survivor is expressed to convey a beneficial owner or if the conveyance includes a statement that such survivor is solely and beneficially interested in the legal estate ( Law of Property ( Joint Tenants ) Act 1964 ) .
10 The deployment of a weapon system involves a threat that that system will be used in certain circumstances which to some extent can be deduced from the characteristics of the weapon system itself .
11 The " ontological " version , as we saw , involves an assumption that existential propositions , in the final analysis , can be reproduced in terms of propositions that do not explicitly assert but rather presuppose the existence of certain ontological objects .
12 But it is not only extremist rhetoric from Ulster sects which entails a view that British troubles with the IRA are part of some wider battle between civilisation and savagery .
13 As soon as the back marking algorithm finds a proof that some state N does not lead to a goal , it tests to see if the same proof applies to ancestors A of N. When the same proof works for A , it prunes A and all its other descendants too .
14 History has been called the science of the future , so it seems a pity that this body of research comes up with virtually none of the solutions to the problems plaguing the American energy scene .
15 Frequently , however , the imposition of standards reflects a judgement that important externalities exist or is simply a pure value judgement based on distributional considerations .
16 We have been trying to din into the heads of the electricity boards an inkling that different people are susceptible to different levels of radiation exposure and that there is no safe level .
17 Project Development Manager , Richard Summley , says the Council has been very slow in reacting and he denies a claim that disabled patients will also be hit by the fees .
18 Chapter 1 of this book presents a case that good communications between all members of a firm and its customers are essential to its success .
19 At its purest , Indian English also preserves an elegance that many Britons have forgotten .
20 This implies a challenge that contemporary Marxism has yet to address .
21 Often an introductory section mentions that the teacher may select and may concentrate on certain aspects in preference to others ; sometimes it gives an indication that regional variations in content may be acceptable in certain cases .
22 There was and there still remains a feeling that some Union members feel as though they have ‘ allowed ’ us to exist autonomously and have special union representation .
23 I have come to believe that the dualism and utilitarianism that now lie behind what many environmentalists are doing today poses a threat that most environmentalists do n't even begin to understand .
24 It will take a little practice to get right , but a tie made properly and firmly in this way will ‘ feel ’ right , and it will at once be clear how and why this method does a job that other methods and materials do not do .
25 The passage sets up a straightforward opposition between what de Man calls " two apparently incompatible chains of connotation " : De Man 's claim that these poles enter into a system of exchanges and substitutions becomes an argument that this opposition " also contains statements claiming the priority of metaphor in a binary system that opposes metaphor to metonymy " ( 1979 : 62 ) .
26 Meanwhile , it squarely embodies an assumption that causal laws are correlations , thus ruling out reference to structures and structural forces to explain the correlations .
27 this suggests a recognition that cultural production is itself a form of knowledge or , as Hilary Robinson has put it in a recent issue of WAM ( No49 ) in discussing women 's body art , that artists could be said to be producing theory visually ’ .
28 It must be questioned whether the presence of any particular species of predator in a fossiliferous deposit provides an indication that that predator accumulated the bones in the same deposit .
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