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

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1 The problem is , however , that it is of little help in producing a list of user needs : the temptation would be to say either that everyone requires the same information or that everyone requires different information ; the former would make the exercise redundant and the latter would make it impossible to handle .
2 The economist 's definition of public goods relies solely on the fact that everyone consumes the same quantity .
3 Is it to be given to ensure that everyone has the correct drawing or to save time ?
4 It was probably this occasion which prompted Lloyd George to write of Balfour : ‘ I confess that I underrated the passionate attachment to his country which burnt under that calm , indifferent , and apparently frigid exterior ’ ; upon which Balfour 's latest biographer has somewhat severely commented : ‘ By ‘ passionate attachment to his country , ’ Lloyd George , presumably meant Balfour 's backing for him as Prime Minister … ’
5 It was , especially , upon retiring to bed late in the night of the seventh or eighth day after the placing of the Lady Madeline within the donjon , that I experienced the full power of such feelings .
6 I sent away and passed the exams and I became a policeman , but I always wanted to become a policeman when I , from about eighteen or nineteen it 's just that I drifted the wrong way .
7 For I have not bothered to tell her that I spotted the blasted thing on our drive back from Bournemouth to London , lurking in a lay-by .
8 Last year , so piqued was I by this , that I plunged the outsize handbag of an excessively bossy senior stewardess from Central Office into a fire-bucket of water on the grounds that it could have contained an incendiary device .
9 It 's just that I prefer the other rooms . ’
10 I admit that I prefer the longer film , but that may be because I saw it first .
11 During my time as a gamekeeper it was essential that I knew the precise location of all these extended burrows .
12 then I had another I had another wee problem that I 'd been , I had been to see , and it was Doctor I had been , and the doctor that I saw the last time er I had three big bruises on my back , and she
13 Tell her that I hope the next time I come to stay she wo n't have such a huge fire in the Blue Room . ’
14 It was only when telling someone about the finale , weeks later , that I realized the unconscious pun of ‘ Sayer Little Prayer ’ and he washed over me all over again .
15 But it 's still the same , but it 's the pains that I got the last time that 's gon it 's like sharp pains that 's going round about , just the insides of the nipple .
16 He was on his way home — characteristically late , I realize , now that I keep the same office hours from the back blocks of the building where I am now sitting .
17 at this stage that I made the unconscious decision , later to manifest itself in physiological terms , to postpone sexuality until I felt myself ready to cope with it .
18 My story is similar to Annie 's in that I made the same mistake and thought of my granddaughter as a substitute child .
19 Point two is this , that I made the bottom border there er about be exactly five centimetres .
20 ‘ It is necessary for business purposes that I speak the major languages of Europe .
21 Looking back , I can not imagine that I understood the finer points of the contract M. Chaillot placed before me .
22 It was only then that I noticed the small man seated in the armchair next to mine .
23 As I recall , then , it was only an hour or so after being first entrusted with the mission that I noticed the young Mr Cardinal alone in the library , sitting at one of the writing tables , absorbed in some documents .
24 It was only as we were doing this and grinning inanely at each other that I noticed the red Transit van turning out of the other end of the street .
25 I am delighted that it has now decided to co-operate with the Government and solve a problem that I brought the regional affairs committee of the European Parliament over to look at 14 years ago .
26 I announced such a review at a conference that I addressed the other day .
27 Now that I know the genetic formula of my insects , I can reproduce them at will , and I can tell the computer to " evolve " towards them from any arbitrary starting point .
28 From afar it looks like the classical volcanic cone and it is with a mounting sense of excitement that I climb the last section of loose lava gravel and sharp , welded lava rock .
29 I got remanded twice , then I got probation on condition that I attended the Winterborn Unit , a mental hospital near Oxford , as a day patient .
30 If you move straight from chapter 5 to chapter 8 you will get a stark contrast between two theories of justification , and all you need to know for the moment is that I take the intervening chapters to provide a reason against any form of foundationalism .
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