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

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1 The atmosphere of grey repression that clung to the eastern side of the city is being purged at an astonishing speed .
2 It would , therefore , make sense if axons played a part in controlling the number of oligodendrocytes that develop in a myelinated tract .
3 A major problem that arose at an early stage was the reconciliation of the local authority 's requirements for one car-parking space per flat with the DoE 's refusal to fund a scheme in which the entire ground floor would be used for parking .
4 The later theory of instincts , which included the death instincts , as well as the sexual instincts which were retained from the first formulation , seemed to solve the theoretical difficulties that arose with the first theory of instincts .
5 On all the imperial and foreign policy issues that arose over the succeeding years ( the Cold War , Germany , the Atlantic Alliance , Indochina , Korea , the European Defence Community ) , he insisted on defining a " party line " .
6 Now that he had arrived at the wildest part of Britain , he wished to use his adventure in the same spirit as that in which Montaigne wrote his famous Essais — as trials of himself , as investigations of the ideas that arose in the non-stop chatter of his mind .
7 Two kicks of his big flippers were sufficient to send him drifting back up towards the surface that quivered in the harsh sunlight like a sheet of liquid mercury .
8 If I want group members ' approval , I will accept the dictates of the group about my role , even though I might not accept that influence in a one-to-one relationship .
9 The motherboards are arranged in four clusters that communicate through a single backplane .
10 The motherboards are arranged in four clusters that communicate through a single backplane .
11 It was these two towns therefore that became of the utmost importance and , as Royalist and Parliamentarian forces fought to gain supremacy , the surrounding villages and hamlets became the scene of many violent skirmishes .
12 Members of the Royal Family have long been aware that to remain in the public conscience requires coming to terms with , and feeding , the needs of the media .
13 Yet every time he laughed and his grin dazzled her she flinched with the deep-rooted need that stabbed like a vengeful sword .
14 I think that often it was jealousy — mixed with booze — that made for a lethal cocktail , with Bogie as the stirrer .
15 On the negative side , funerals were becoming so much more secular in outlook , appearance and context that the surviving guilds and fraternities found themselves hard-pressed to provide all that made for an average funeral of the new type ; the rules were being rewritten by a public which no longer wished to perpetuate the simple ritual hitherto provided and which were looking for a pageantry close to that of the great baronial funerals as performed by the College of Arms , a corporation of heralds and part of the Royal Household .
16 For the client , the advantage was that he could go direct to those various tradesmen who , collectively , could provide all that made for an average funeral .
17 Edward 's only extant will is that made before the French expedition of 1475 , and on internal evidence it had been modified , if not superseded , by 1483 .
18 Edward 's only extant will is that made before the French expedition of 1475 , and on internal evidence it had been modified , if not superseded , by 1483 .
19 He had the revolutionary idea that gravity was not just a force that operated in a fixed background of space-time .
20 All saw the shudder that rippled through the big man like a wave ; the way his chin jutted forward and his face contorted in agony as he steeled himself to strike .
21 For the sake of clarity , one possible solution is to provide that the SSAPs to be used are those that applied at a specified date even if changed subsequently between exchange and completion .
22 He went down the corridor that led off the central area .
23 ‘ Willingly , ’ Rose agreed , and led the way to a small antechamber that led off the main saloon .
24 We walked naked along the path that led across the ice-covered sea .
25 I am sure it was the pressure from the warrior class and the impending general election that led to a final figure of 63,500 , which is a cut of about 17 per cent .
26 Northumberland had their outside-half Ian Chandler to thank for the late drop goal that led to a 13–11 victory over Alberta on a day when a freak Arctic airflow brought snow and near freezing temperatures to Calgary .
27 The road was beginning to rise slightly , an incline that led to a gentle crest .
28 As both polyester and polyamide are ultimately derived from oil , the industry suffered a major trauma ; raw material prices went up between three and four times — and that led to a rapid revision of growth rate potential .
29 Unfortunately , that led to a minor accident involving the property of the Hauxwells which I suspect even Hannah will not know about .
30 And those last months , when strike leapfrogged strike , were the catalyst that led to a Conservative landslide and the desperate recasting of Labour policies .
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