Example sentences of "[vb pp] that [pron] [verb] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 So now I always and so I , I 'm thinking that it might be that , that I that erm maybe you know like I used to be anxious about something like that and I used to wake up and the dream used to happen , but now that I 've double checked that I know for sure that , that I 'm safe you know for the night it does n't happen any more by cutting off possibility
2 When one begins to take passages of Scripture and to ask how those can be so presented that they speak with equal force and with the same intended meaning as when they were originally communicated , all kinds of possibilities emerge .
3 To Victorian eyes , any interior from that earlier period might have seemed underfurnished ; but the construction that George Eliot puts on the dominance of walls and ceiling is decisively Victorian in its moral emphasis : ‘ in walking through these rooms with their splendid ceilings and their meagre furniture , which tell how all the spare money had been absorbed before personal comfort was thought of , I have felt that there dwelt in this old English baronet some of that sublime spirit which distinguishes art from luxury , and worships beauty apart from self-indulgence ’ .
4 Police had earlier revealed that he died in similar circumstances to Mr Walker .
5 Traditionally , psychologists have said that we cope with this by organising experienced stimuli into a limited number of categories or concepts .
6 Presumably , since it is said that she lived to 127 , her sixties would be equivalent to our thirties or forties .
7 As Burton loved to live in opposition — it made him feel most alive and it could be argued that he lived in serious opposition to his own body for long stretches of his life — it is interesting to speculate whether the homosexual network gave yet another spin to his heterosexuality .
8 Variations obviously occur from village to village and from area to area , so that no claim is made that what follows in this chapter applies to each and every village in England .
9 This is a life so transformed that it stands in utter contrast to the life which comes naturally to us as human beings .
10 The court was told that she dabbled in black magic and tried summoning messages from the spirit world by using a ouija board .
11 Accordingly , Sir David has requested that I convey to young Reginald the facts of life . ’
12 Analyses of outcropping Carboniferous shales have shown that they range from lean to rich .
13 Experience has shown that they call for more work from officials , and that they meet with resistance from officials ( see Jenkins , 1978 ) .
14 It should be noted that it follows from this that an action in respect of a public law wrong can be a private action for present purposes if it is against a non-governmental body .
15 It can be demonstrated that they go beyond mere autorepresentation , and that they contextualize in a variety of ways , as the recent autobiographical texts demonstrate .
16 Sir , the pond in D thirty nine has been shown to be a breeding place for the Great Crested Newt , but it is also known that it migrates to other ponds , several others , but does not necessarily breed there , but chooses at Skelton .
17 The Far Eastern Economic Review of April 25 reported that some government officials and members of the armed forces had welcomed the creation of the Forum , provided that it complied with strict government guidelines on political behaviour .
18 It is quoted in full : 6 Private residence exception : separated couples Where a married couple separate or are divorced and one partner ceases to occupy the matrimonial home and subsequently as part of a financial settlement disposes of the home , or an interest in it , to the other partner the home may be regarded for the purposes of Sections [ 222 to 224 of TCGA 1992 ] 101 to 103 as continuing to be a residence of the transferring partner from the date his or her occupation ceases until the date of transfer , provided that it has throughout this period been the other partner 's only or main residence .
19 The words were so softly spoken that she wondered at first if she 'd heard correctly .
20 In fact , these two warts are so enlarged that they look like long swellings behind the animal 's eyes , covered with pores through which the poison seeps .
21 It is believed that they migrated to central Italy from Asia Minor or possibly further east in the eighth century B.C. ; remaining dominant and independent until the third century B.C. after which they were gradually Latinised under Roman rule .
22 Even employers who steadfastly denied that they would ever use such a method usually indicated that they knew of those who did .
23 Only recently has it been discovered that they come to these special places to gather specific minerals such as kaolin which neutralise the poison they have absorbed from the seeds they eat at this season of the year .
24 Indeed its members often denied that they belonged to any ‘ group ’ ; they were , they said , primarily friends , with certain family connections , who found some definition ( and their group name ) from the district of London where a number of them lived .
25 He stands aside from the path and is warned that he tramples on sown seed .
26 She said Thresher was aware of the receipt for £18.37 and had established that it belonged to another customer .
27 I have suggested that it enters into some kind of relationship with words and contexts .
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