Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] [verb] that [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Romantic love gives us a glimmer of something that we remember during the sticky times , and it 's only when the sticky times begin that real love starts to take over .
2 But ideologically , nationalisation became something of an irrelevance since both major political parties accepted that some form of state control and assistance was essential for coal , rail transport , electricity , gas , civil aviation , cable and wireless , and the Bank of England .
3 It pulls together , with impressive clarity , the tangled story that started at Chilhac , in the Auvergne , where a group of five hand-worked pebbles demonstrates that human habitation in Europe dates back at least 1,800,000 years .
4 Estate agents right across the country are swinging back into action and The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors says that rising activity has continued this month .
5 In the study by Chacin et al quoted earlier the stimulatory action of ethanol persisted even in calcium free solutions implying that extracellular calcium is not essential for its action .
6 In so doing , she encapsulates the polarity that pulls female artists today : from one magnetic field , the radical difference of the female body tugs at artists ' imaginations , while from the opposite pole , the crucial determining role of material and cultural circumstances cancels that radical difference in its foundations and essence and introduces fluctuating criteria .
7 As it became apparent that considerable variations in training were to be found , the ( now ) British Library Research and Development Group for Research into Public Libraries felt that more information was needed about current practice , and in September 1982 , British Library Research and Development and The Library Association agreed to liaise on the development of an exploratory survey .
8 The attempt was inspired by the work of the Logical Positivists in the 1930s , notably Rudolph Carnap , Carl Hempel , and Ernest Nagel , and prompted very many social scientists to believe that scientific method could be boldly distilled in diagrams like Figure 3.1 .
9 Adaptive innovations could thus be separated , as the ones that are hereditarily transmitted , from the maladaptive , as the ones that are not ; although Darwin notes that hereditary diseases show that this separation is often fallible .
10 Social commentators noted that this phenomenon was not new : bright colours and rising skirts apparently went with good times whilst body concealment and drab tones accompanied depression .
11 And indeed , since social anthropology is centrally concerned with the diversity of culture , it would be quite absurd if it could somehow be inferred from what social anthropologists teach that cultural diversity is both politically and morally deplorable .
12 It was in response to this that the Scott Committee on Land Utilization in Rural Areas urged that agricultural use should have priority in any conflicts over rural land use .
13 These matters could be left to the two parties to agree as they arise , but the standard forms assume that prior agreement will lead to a smoother running project .
14 Spearheads were made in a wide range of identifiable forms emphasising that each iron object was a unique forging .
15 Analyses of data for several developed countries confirm that maternal age and parity appear profoundly to affect mothers ' health before and after confinement .
16 Natural infection may have also contributed to the high seroprevalences in the IPV group 13–17 months after vaccination , although evidence from previous studies in poliomyelitis-free areas suggests that this finding is more likely to be due to brisk secondary responses in children who had been primed with OPV and who later received poliovirus antigen parenterally in the form of IPV .
17 Put another way , thoughtful Conservatives recognise that electoral reform would probably secure the right of middle ground in the face of socialist challenge but at the cost of blocking the returning prospect of the chance to implement the hard-right vision .
18 Shakespeare 's early poems sketch that double vision and later many of his heroes are plagued by it .
19 A popular modern interpretation of liberal ideas argues that private autonomy should be lost not through a special exercise of choice but rather through causing harm , or the risk of causing harm , to others .
20 Early studies suggested that relative mortality risks among female smokers were less than those of male smokers but it is now clear that these studies were comparing the death rates of a generation of male smokers with a generation of women amongst whom smoking was a much more recent phenomenon .
21 Official figures show that private consumption under Sandinista rule has fallen by 70 per cent .
22 Official figures show that private consumption under Sandinista rule has fallen by 70 per cent .
23 Corporatist theories argue that major interest groups are incorporated into the decision-making apparatus of the state .
24 Biblical scholars concur that this incident — manifestly an important one in Jesus 's career and calculated to attract maximum attention among his contemporaries — served a very specific purpose .
25 Thus , while the visual impact of the extra trackways implied that significant damage was taking place , the actual ecological impact was relatively small .
26 In such situations we take appropriate measures to ensure that strict confidentiality is maintained in all respects .
27 In such situations we take appropriate measures to ensure that strict confidentiality is maintained in all respects .
28 In such situations we take appropriate measures to ensure that strict confidentiality is maintained in all respects .
29 In such situations we take appropriate measures to ensure that strict confidentiality is maintained in all respects .
30 In such situations we take appropriate measures to ensure that strict confidentiality is maintained in all respects .
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