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

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1 We have made it clear that we regard this scheme as flawed since it fails to provide to those who are legally aided that to which the Act entitled them , namely that solicitors they select will be properly remunerated .
2 Furthermore , both I and my right hon. and learned Friend have made it clear that we want more education provided locally for adults than is currently available .
3 It became clear that we needed more time and more study before we could support both Conrad 's ( 1979 ) and Meadow 's ( 1980 ) conclusions that deaf children need the early support of speech-based signing .
4 Through the haze of Bell 's which had been the weekend , it had become clear that he had little alternative .
5 Nothing is known of his early life , but it is clear that he acquired practical experience of chemistry and engineering .
6 When asked whether he would support a constitutional change in Scotland if he did not have proportional representation , he said no ; so he makes it clear that he gives higher priority to the self-interest of the Liberal Democrats and a voting system that would help them than to the issue of principle on Scotland 's constitutional future .
7 It seems clear that she found some difficulty in arriving at an assessment of her feelings in relation to me .
8 ‘ You made it abundantly clear that you have one hell of a good social life at home .
9 If all the people living in your house who have incomes are over pensionable age ( 60 years for women and 65 years for men ) , you will not be disconnected between October 1 and March 31 unless it is clear that you have sufficient money to pay .
10 Ford , however , has made it clear that it wants ultimate majority control of Jaguar — something which the company 's board , led by chairman Sir John Egan , is resisting fiercely .
11 These relations between finite coordinate distances are generally so inconvenient that it makes more sense to start calculations from the differentials which do transform linearly : .
12 He waited with roused senses for what would come next ; and what came was so transparent that he had hard work not to laugh , and set out without more ado to take every advantage of a stratagem that would not have fooled a child in arms .
13 But I am afraid that you have another ordeal ahead of you . ’
14 It is particularly interesting that he notes that science has come to hold , for some , the status of a religion : students of the arts , for example , might regard science as ‘ mystical ’ .
15 It is equally undeniable that they derive great pleasure from physical confrontations with rival groups of supporters and go to great lengths to evade the authorities and make such confrontations possible .
16 Of course it 's just possible that she has poor eyesight — a woman like that would be too vain to wear spectacles .
17 If Burun had originated the plot , it was possible that he felt some responsibility towards Sidacai .
18 It is precisely because so many of us experience the world of work , government , the military , multinational corporations , etc. as impersonal that we seek personal fulfilment in the private sphere of leisure and the family .
19 Indeed , we were so anxious to get the figures right that we had little time to spend explaining why what we proposed was morally necessary .
20 Hugging the ground , dodging clumps of splintered trees , hopping over hedges and walls and old fortified lines , Lambert led Kimberley and Killion so low that they had little opportunity to take their eyes off the terrain and look for balloons .
21 Erm , and he said , you know , I really resent the fact that you treat me like a village idiot , and I said , well you know , I 'm sorry that you feel that way , but my experience is of a group of fourteen people , erm , is that somebody always gets it wrong .
22 In a sense this is an extreme form of heterogeneous accretion of volatiles , though the separation of planetary accretion from the veneering by volatiles is so complete that it merits separate consideration .
23 Erm well it 's , i various changes in erm the upset that we had last year with the recession and
24 It is ironic that IT makes fundamental change both essential and possible , but — to repeat — we need the change anyway .
25 Nor is it impossible that she believed this legend .
26 The Labour Party believes that these qualifications are so serious that they remove any presumption that the government can rely on a free market economy .
27 Indeed , I was especially delighted that we won that contract for this country .
28 Because he is so damned real that you think this pain and suffering is really him .
29 I 'm I 'm not entirely convinced that we have enough control over the existing county schools , never mind , never mind whether we 'd be able to retain it or increase it .
30 After sitting in the stalls and watching the summer show , the other two were convinced that they had good reason enough to want him .
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