Example sentences of "[that] [adv] [adv] [pers pn] [verb] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Well perhaps because they were more idealist and that now they 're becoming more realist but they 're still erm I mean they 're learning from their past mistakes and they 've seen that right so we have to have a moderate policy which is gon na take us a little bit further towards socialism .
2 What is serious about so much school work generally is that so frequently it seems to fail to have any deep effect on life outside the classroom .
3 The drawback of employment in central and local government , to some minds , is that so often you fail to see any outcome to your work .
4 The way that so far we have approached the matter has been highly theoretical .
5 Mr Yegor Gaidar , First Deputy Prime Minister , said : ‘ I am convinced that so far we have agreed on effective co-operation in order to resolve the problem by joint effort .
6 She gave a cool glance in return , cautiously pleased that so far she had betrayed nothing of her reaction at standing so close to him .
7 You have to admit that so far I have played Honest Joe .
8 Well they just went back and said they could n't want something that much maybe she 's gone over her limit .
9 As the sun came up and he was able to make out the grassy track along which he had been striding through the night he realised that once again he had missed the verderers , that there were no fresh hoof-marks .
10 The extraordinary thing about the tenor of the right hon. Gentleman 's speech in the past few minutes is that once again he seeks to make out that this is not a very important problem and that we can push it away .
11 I think I knew in my heart that once again he wanted to do something ‘ useful , in the sense that it 's got to be done ’ .
12 He returns to his routine , but finds that once again he has failed .
13 You will find the programme for the coming season attached and I hope you will agree that once more we have planned varied and stimulating sessions for you .
14 There was also fear that he was going to punish her in some unpleasant way for Jason 's actions , and other , deeper fears that even now she refused to acknowledge .
15 I think it did have a lot to do with the status that being different conferred , for in spite of the austerity of our childhood , we believed that we were better than other people , the food we ate being a mark of this , because our mother told us so — so successfully that even now I have to work hard at actually seeing the deprivations .
16 It is typical of Richard that he accepted the task with alacrity and succeeded with such brilliance that almost overnight he became recognized as a famous warrior .
17 We discovered very rapidly that if it was the doctor that had to present the age-well project to the patients that quite often they forgot to do it .
18 But their discouragement stems mainly from confusing self-confidence with certainty , so that quite unnecessarily they tend to despise their own much weaker faith .
19 Some people can take or leave cigarettes just as they can take Or leave an alcoholic drink — Others find that however hard they try to stop smoking and however much they may be aware of the damaging consequences of continuing to do so , they simply can not stop but find themselves compelled to continue .
20 The trouble with Labour-supporting celebrities is that very largely they want to pronounce .
21 Maybe that very quickly he started coming up with lyrics and that he and I got on well right from the off , Well , not quite from the off .
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