Example sentences of "[that] those [pron] [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 For fear that those who disseminate racist propaganda would turn to newer mediums of communication , it was decided to deal explicitly and comprehensively with all forms of communication such as films , tapes , records and video recordings , f not all of which would unambiguously have fallen within the proposed law .
2 As regards the legal position of some 350,000 Chinese living in Indonesia , it was eventually agreed that China would offer them citizenship , and that those who declined this offer would be granted permanent residency rights by the Indonesian government .
3 Sentencing the three men on Aug. 28 , he said that the offence had been an attack on the integrity of the stock market , and that he wished " to send a clear message that those who seek commercial advantage by acting dishonestly … can expect little mercy from the courts " .
4 He stated that those who disobeyed this order ‘ will be severely punished ’ .
5 It seems that those who become active evangelicals stand a better chance of obtaining housing materials and educational opportunities for their children .
6 We have launched a reform of our prisons , improving the prospect that those who serve custodial sentences will not return to crime .
7 Criminal bankruptcy orders , designed to ensure that those who committed large-scale crimes , especially fraud , should not be able to benefit from the fruits of their criminal activities , were also included .
8 It is noteworthy that those who advocate these policies also themselves concede in surveys that they would welcome an increase in the basic rate of tax as well as other tax increases .
9 Pruger ( 1973 ) and Uttley ( 1980 ) argued that those who receive free services perceive themselves to be in debt in two senses :
10 And er fifthly then , the fifth condition is that those who receive presidential orders were in no doubt about the president 's authority to give those orders .
11 Note the important educational and pedagogic conclusion Phizacklea and Miles draw from their research : the significance of immediate daily experience in producing and reproducing inner-city working-class racism , in conjunction with the backdrop of a widespread nationalist culture of racism in British society , means that those who express racist hostility ‘ are very resistant to modification as a result of argument from outsiders ’ ( ibid. , p. 120 ) .
12 It seemed that those who augmented inadequate incomes by poaching or stealing food raised physically healthier families than the more law-abiding .
13 My final plea is that those who create new policies take seriously and consider fully the perspectives and situations of the practitioner .
14 However , this does not necessarily imply that virtually all use of heroin leads to a daily habit , but only that those who contact these agencies have established daily use of the drug .
15 The answer to this is almost certainly ‘ Yes it would ’ , for humans are well aware that those who have guilty secrets , rarely enjoy true peace of mind .
16 If the subordinate members of society can be persuaded to believe that those who dominate have a right to do so , and that those who have great material advantage have a right to it , then they are very unlikely to challenge or threaten the privileged .
17 We have considered alternative definitions of a legal problem and indicated what we consider to be the best working definition to adopt , but this discussion will remain largely academic ( save in estimating the extent of unmet legal need ) unless there is some effective way of ensuring that those who have legal problems , however defined , secure legal assistance .
18 ‘ They know they have no option but to stay in the job and try and do better , but the harsh truth is that those who have high production costs and low productivity will not survive the next three or four years of rapid transition . ’
19 We should also note that it is based on certain assumptions , for example it is assumed that those who have some reason to form a pressure group will , in an open society , do so , and that the degree of governmental response will depend on the degree of pressure the group is able to exert , and that this is directly related to the group 's importance to the community .
20 One might expect that those who report intense imagery when awake would also report more hypnagogic experiences .
21 As Hyman ( 1984 , p.156 ) puts it , it is hardly surprising ‘ that those who exercise managerial authority typically resent this limitation on their autonomy , and are sometimes haunted by the fear that strikes may escalate into an explicit challenge to the minority control of industry , .
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