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

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1 Its effect was remembered well into the nineteenth century in Birmingham ; at that later time the campaigners against apprenticeship in the West Indies reproduced and distributed a magazine plate of a Jamaican treadmill on which apprentices were employed , in the conviction that pictorial representations have a far more powerful influence on the mind than letter press descriptions ' .
2 in the conviction that human rights and basic freedoms are of great significance as part of the all-European legacy and that respecting them is a fundamental precondition for progress in the construction of this peace order , …
3 Jenna looked across at him as they sat with their coffee in the sitting-room that still bore the signs of her mother 's impeccable taste .
4 ( It was accepted by both sides in the case that legal personality started at birth and not before ) .
5 Appendix A reports a European Councillor of Directive , ninety-three stroke one-oh-four stroke E C. Which erm , is being challenged , or would like to be challenged by the U K including European Court of Justice erm , and that will be heard in the timescale that these things take place .
6 He knew from the stories he had been told in the chapel that many people in days of old had seen God or one of God 's angels .
7 This is nowhere better exemplified than in the treatment that some consultants in the NHS offered those who had to visit them as out-patients .
8 There were two ideas at work , then , in the proposal that public sector institutions should be self-validating , ideas which did not obviously hold together .
9 it was a symbol of the new mood in the country that ordinary people wanted to participate in politics whereas in the past protest had been expressed through local guerrilla risings and religious demonstrations .
10 You should end up with at least six separate lists , some with perhaps only one item on it , others with several items , listed in the order that each client received , or was assisted with , that care .
11 It is this environment of faith in the home that western society needs so desperately to recover .
12 It is in the home that Christian identity is formed and encouraged , and where Christian relationships are worked out .
13 Thereupon the applicants , who had been unable to plead justification as defence in the libel action , applied to the Court of Appeal ( Criminal Division ) , as the court to whom the implied undertaking had been given by B. , to vary the undertaking to permit B. , who was anxious to co-operate , to disclose to them the authority 's documents in the interests of justice to enable them to plead justification with full particularity and in the expectation that admissible evidence would become available to support the plea at trial of the action .
14 Only then will they be able to plead the defence both with full particularity and in the expectation that admissible evidence will become available to support the plea at trial .
15 Chambers Dictionary defines cryptogams as a ‘ class of flowerless plants so named by Linnaeus in the expectation that sexual reproduction would one day be discovered ’ .
16 Example B. Mr Careless , the proprietor of The Barmy Towers Hotel , overbooks the rooms in his hotel , in the expectation that some guests may cancel and he will still have a full hotel .
17 In view of this it seems appropriate to study mucosal metabolism in ileal as well as colonic mucosa in UC patients and controls in the expectation that any abnormalities that could be detected in the histologically normal ileum of ulcerative colitis patients would be unlikely to be secondary phenomena .
18 Molly spoke quietly and in English , only for the purpose of relieving her feelings and not in the expectation that this woman would understand .
19 The relationship between the library and the subjects on the curriculum is embodied in the principle that all subjects require information skills and must therefore accept responsibility for children 's " learning how to learn " , with the library as the main resource whereby this skill may be applied .
20 There is , then , nothing contrary to the normal operation of language in the proposition that lexical items of high generality like then and now should be given grammatical status as in the examples given earlier .
21 Yet splendid it was in quality , and business was indeed done , despite catastrophic rumours in the press that certain Paris dealers would have to file for bankruptcy when the show closed .
22 You may have seen in the press that British Telecom is planning to create more phone numbers to meet growing demand for telecommunications services .
23 What is there in the nest that this cuckoo did not touch ?
24 But the book is written in the faith that such errors in readers ' responses can be corrected , and that when this is done their way will be open to the poet 's mental condition , and therefore to the correct experience of the poem .
25 It is often suggested in the literature that male migration aggravates environmental degradation as women 's coping strategies are modified to accommodate the fall in labour availability in rural households .
26 And I would say that in this respect , too , there is another point in the Act that each child now must be related in some way to what is called a responsible person .
27 The result is an argument organized in three categories , all of which connect in the idea that sporting superiority is racially linked .
28 He had thrown in the idea that accelerated freeze drying might be a good process to use in drying out books without damage .
29 A pre-arranged trade can still be a commercial trade , in the sense that actual profit and loss is involved .
30 It is sometimes claimed that there are languages without true tenses , for example Chinese or Yoruba , and this is correct in the sense that such languages may lack L-tenses morphologically marked in the verb , or indeed systematically elsewhere ( Comrie , 1976a : 82ff ; Lyons , 1977a : 678-9 ) .
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