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

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1 The only reliable difference in Table 1 is that between the pooled combining conditions , and versus with : by a chi-square test , .
2 It is certainly true that for a few crucial generations in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries , the influence of Spanish Jesuits on the never-very-alert minds of the Habsburg emperors was decisive .
3 The selection process is not unlike that for a giant multinational corporation , and those who win through have some similarities to corporate executives .
4 I watch him play both and quietly agree that for a nine-year-old gaelic football offers a more interesting challenge ; more skills , more individual expression and less opportunity for what nine-year-olds call glory-hunting .
5 In truly Sartrean terms , Nu:an concludes that for the contemporary revolutionary writer the central dilemma is located in the problematical relationship between writer and reading public .
6 It was agreed that for the 1908–09 financial year , which began in July , the wage bill for eight or nine staff should not exceed £500 in total , ( an average of less than £1 each per week ) .
7 Regarding the management structures you have supplied , I suggest that for the smaller unitary authorities a second Assistant Director should be inserted in the proposed Planning Department structures .
8 Royal watchers said that during the first official engagement of the day the royal couple appeared to be in fairly good spirits , although they were not seen to talk to each other or exchange glances .
9 The Minister will recall that during the first Tory recession , Ministers claimed that making many people redundant was a price worth paying to make British industry leaner and fitter .
10 At an extreme , such detailed localised studies can appear to demonstrate that during the early modern period no one outside a state-sanctioned minority of policy makers had , let alone acted on , an idea which had alternate social and political implications , rather than responded to , say , the price of corn in a specific market .
11 The Soviet press stressed that during the Soviet Iranian talks ‘ no agreement resembling what the Iranian Minister is now saying was or could have been reached ’ .
12 Monitoring over the past 50 years has shown that during the 1960s deep convection did not occur and the temperature and salinity of LSW gradually increased .
13 It is also notable that in Australia , despite the predominance of the arbitration system , there were similar signs that during the 1970s collective bargaining had penetrated at plant and workshop level even though there was little formal institutionalised machinery for this .
14 The book can be seen as an attempt by Scott to assert himself as leading expert on Gothic Revival secular buildings , perhaps having felt that during the great church-building period of the 1840s and 1850s his work was overshadowed by that of other architects , particularly Pugin and Street .
15 It is true that during the 1991/92 presidential year a certain amount of friction occurred between Moorgate Place and the district societies , but it should be made clear that this was almost entirely due to the funding problems and not because of any breakdown in the relationship between the national president and the district society presidents .
16 It was one of her many advantages that as a professional civil servant herself she understood the constraints of his career .
17 I would not want today 's announcement to go by without underlining how important the contribution of renewable energy projects is to reducing the emissions that lead to global warming , and we should recognise that as an important environmental benefit .
18 In general , there is no doubt that through the entire post-war period the readership of the national press reflected divisions of social class and education more distinctly than anything else — age , gender , religion , political attitude and so on .
19 Because phosphorylated gap43 can not bind calmodulin , it is possible that through the resulting increased availability of calmodulin , the phosphorylation of synaptic vesicle proteins such as CaMKII substrates synaptophysin and synapsin could be affected , leading to modulation of vesicle fusion and hence of transmitter release .
20 No wonder that after the intense psychological preparation for the big move which never came , many became disillusioned with hachshara and left .
21 Evidence suggests that after an initial second-century surge of activity in Normangate Field , the number of kilns declined in the third and fourth , as manufacture gave way to other activities and moved further afield to more convenient locations .
22 Reynolds said that despite the considerable economic progress made by Ireland in the past three years , the size of the national debt [ see below ] continued to be a major constraint upon development and prevented further tax concessions .
23 A thing to be forgotten , and certainly not something that had any power in the present except that of a distant unhappy memory .
24 The result of one limited survey of penis lengths carried out by Dr Robert Charturn showed that of the five European groups measured the longest in each group ( as classified ) was :
25 In 1901 , an Englishmen , William Knox D " Arch , was given the right " to search for , obtain , exploit … carry away and sell " all Iranian oil save that of the five northern provinces .
26 If he is really concerned to increase the number of homes available to rent , why will he not recognise that of the 700,000 empty properties , 100,000 are in the council sector and 600,000 are privately owned ?
27 Such a diet somewhat resembles that of the native Ugandan community where hypertension was exceedingly rare ( Orr & Gilks , 1931 ) .
28 ‘ You said that like a spoiled little girl , señorita , and not like an icy journalist at all . ’
29 I had hoped that like the proverbial old soldier I could just quietly fade away but it did n't quite pan out like that .
30 It is possible that against a long-term downward movement of population , perhaps sparked off by a variety of economic concerns , the economic depression helped to determine the immediate attitudes in some of the old declining industrial centres just as the prospect of prosperity , and the accumulation of consumer goods and property , may have stimulated a desire to control family size among the population of the expanding industrial centres of the Midlands and the South East .
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