Example sentences of "to that [prep] [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 By drawing General Managers ' attention to the British Gas environment publications ; ensuring they have an adequate supply along with display holders [ similar to that outside the Public relations office ] and letting them know how and from whom to obtain additional information .
2 ‘ Nevertheless , the atmosphere today compared to that of a few weeks ago is more conducive to a satisfactory settlement , ’ concluded Donald .
3 He used the columns of the Irish Times to inform Roman catholic consciences of permitted interpretations of state divorce on the grounds of religious liberty , interpretations which were diametrically opposed to that of the Irish bishops .
4 The sensitivity of a fourth serological test , Bio-Rad GAP Test IgG , is identical to that of the standard tests but its specificity is significantly lower .
5 Interestingly , the distribution of variants in Lurgan is more similar to that of the inner-city areas than that of the outer areas ( a pattern that applies also to other vowel and consonant variables ) .
6 Its frenzied rejection was very different to that of the many projects listed in the Police Foundation or Home Office Registers of Research mentioned above , most of which are simply ignored and never ever receive any review .
7 The assumption was that the creation of larger authorities ( with larger budgets ) would attract less parochial ( more managerial ) councillors and also make it possible to attract a different sort of officer , less tied to the narrowness of existing departmental boundaries with a management style closer to that of the major corporations in the private sector .
8 The overall result for the three community studies is almost identical to that of the included studies ( odds ratio 0.74 ; 0.64 to 0.86 ) but showed significant heterogeneity ( p<0.0001 ) .
9 If its cost effectiveness was equal to that of the average police authority , it would be able to recruit up to full establishment .
10 The British monarchy , and the survival of aristocratic titles dating back to the Norman conquest lend a spurious sense of continuity to English history ( if not to that of the other countries in the UK ) , suggesting that feudalism imperceptibly evolved into modern capitalist democracy .
11 As Mukařovský wrote ( Garvin 1964 : 22 ) : The task of the structuralist analyst is therefore to identify deviations from existing linguistic and literary practice ( ‘ norms ’ ) occurring at one level of the text ( say its syntax ) , and then relate the structure of this level to that of the other levels ( rhythm , syllable-structure , aspects of subject matter , etc. ) , in order to define the structure of the text as a whole .
12 The distribution of team diagnoses after assessment was similar to that of the new referrals as a whole ( table I ) .
13 The homeworkers ' expectations that they would receive work regularly , and their effective inability to refuse consignments of work , meant that their situation was similar to that of the regular casuals in the " O'Kelly case " .
14 Cowan suggests that the strength of the excitatory interactions increases relative to that of the inhibitory interactions under the influence of the drug .
15 The North American stamp is upon it all , giving the line a flavour completely different to that of the Chilean systems
16 The central importance of the developmental role undertaken since 1988 by the Department of EPD was recognised by it being formally constituted this year as a division of the University , with a status equivalent to that of the four Schools .
17 They thus protect the ants against nest pathogens in a way similar to that of the fungistatic resins collected by bees for their nests .
18 He comes to a similar conclusion to that of the classical theorists of the nineteenth century : face-to-face contacts are many and multifarious , but they are again secondary , fractionalised and based on only a very partial knowledge of a particular individual .
19 Scottish local government was reformed by an Act in 1973 on a pattern not dissimilar to that of the English shires .
20 With the exception of Mona Lisa , it examines in depth only recently cleaned paintings , analysing changes in colour thinking from fifteenth to sixteenth century , from the Cennini system to that of the post-Leonardo artists .
21 Van Dijk 's studies of discourse of the Dutch white working-class show a similar pattern to that of the American studies of ‘ modern racism ’ , in that racist sentiments are simultaneously expressed and denied ( for example , van Dijk , 1983 , 1984 , 1985a ) .
22 grant him every advantage which we can conceive a white to possess over the native ; concede that in the struggle for existence his chance of a long life will be much superior to that of the native chiefs ; yet from all these admissions , there does not follow the conclusion that , after a limited or unlimited number of generations , the inhabitants of the island will be white .
23 Here the myth of the founding text is most clearly articulated to that of the founding fathers , whose word lays down the laws of a history in which women and children do not count .
24 This could only mean that , in time , India would attain a status equal to that of the white dominions .
25 In each case , the level of expression of all three or four proteins were equivalent to that of the original isolates ( data not shown ) .
26 By the spring of 1964 I had persuaded myself that as it was nearly nine years since I joined AIB as a Senior Inspector and I was still a Senior Inspector , I would probably draw my pension as status of the engineering investigators to that of the operational investigators .
27 This , I felt , was long overdue — there had been a tendency to regard their activity as secondary to that of the operational investigators while their technical contribution was in fact of the highest importance .
28 It is unfortunate that the United States Federal Rules of Civil Procedure , while expressing authorising service in a manner prescribed by the law of the foreign country , contains no provision corresponding to that in the English Rules of the Supreme Court that nothing in the Rules authorises or requires the doing in a foreign country of anything contrary to the law of that country ; the issue is referred to merely in the official commentary of the Advisory Committee and then only as affecting the chances of the recognition and enforcement in the foreign country of a judgment obtained in the United States .
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