Example sentences of "that [noun pl] [verb] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It is claimed that the ‘ principle of subsidiarity ’ will ensure that states retain a large measure of independence because federalism means decentralisation .
2 First , writers such as Badie and Birnbaum ( 1983 ) or Moore ( 1967 ) operating from a broad historical perspective suggest that states have a distinct character resulting from long-term processes of political development .
3 It is worth noting once again that calls have an unlimited profit potential similar to that of the long share while that of the puts is limited to E — P ; i.e. the maximum is reached when the share price S has reached zero .
4 Additionally the right qualification ensures that employers have a good idea of an individual 's capabilities .
5 But , as novelists are well aware , it is true , as I hope to show in the final chapter , that houses have an autonomous being of their own : ‘ I 've no control over the saucy things , ’ Margaret Schlegel complains in Howards End , ‘ Houses are alive . ’
6 And , in view of her theory that anorexics have a poor sense of their own size , weight and proportions in general , it may be interesting to examine more closely the status of the eldest child and more specifically the eldest daughter .
7 Certainly everyone involved in the building process finds that contracts play an increasing part in their daily lives and that they therefore have to take more interest in them .
8 It is perhaps for this reason that a Code of Practice was issued by the Secretary of State for the Environment in 1981 which requires that authorities produce a minimum number of specified unit cost statistics .
9 An important point to emerge from one of the studies reviewed is that policies vary a good deal in the effect they will have on trade patterns and terms of trade — and thus on both the overall loss of global welfare and the regional distribution of that loss .
10 Dixie 's free-taking and Jim 's pace have been features of Maghery 's progress to date but the Lough shore men know that Clans represent a massive hurdle .
11 He would mysteriously shake so badly sometimes that old-timers recommended a large brandy .
12 It is important to note in this context that courts have an inherent power to permit anyone to act as advocate , though this is seldom exercised except for the massive exception which at one time allowed police officers to act as prosecutors in the magistrates ' courts .
13 It is essential that tutors provide a good service commensurate with the fees being charged to students and/or their employers .
14 In particular the HMI discuss the role of schools in a changing society , arguing , for example , that schools have a limited role in social change , and rejecting the ‘ curriculum for violent change ’ .
15 Furthermore , three other significant reports ( Hargreaves 1984 , Thomas 1985 and Mortimore 1988 ) continue to present evidence that schools have a significant influence on pupil behaviour .
16 The result is that shops use a work-in-process inventory to buffer themselves against problems and uncertainties , a situation where each station has a long queue of semifinished elements .
17 Campaigners seek to convince the unconverted that animals deserve a better deal !
18 This is a descriptive vote because this hundred er women are not a representative cross section of the whole of Scotland they 're invited to come from various places and ninety six of them think that animals deserve a better deal .
19 If we claim , as Regan does , that animals enjoy a whole range of cognitive abilities in the same sense in which we ascribe these to human beings , then what follows is that ‘ human and animal welfare do not differ in kind ’ ( 1983 : 116 ) .
20 That approach consists of a code of good practice ( The Highway Code ) , a requirement that drivers pass a qualifying test , and a network of offences to penalize those who deviate from proper standards .
21 The child has learned that tantrums gain a predictable response ( even if it is aggressive ) from the parents .
22 Logistically it presents plenty of challenges : for instance trying to arrange cataloguing in many different fields so that entries present a certain conformity ; giving a certain ‘ look ’ and ‘ feel ’ to the sales , is also difficult .
23 He will argue that Scots put a higher proportion of their wealth into forming small businesses but are restricted from getting their fledgling operations off the ground through a lack of capital .
24 This , however , proved to be wholly inappropriate for Wellcome 's needs , largely due to the fact that GIS had a big effect on the system response times and that the amount of report formatting which was required proved to be unmanageable for on-line GIS .
25 Furthermore , he argues that proper-nouns have a grammatical structure , and that the compositional rules for such compounds will have to be written into NLP systems .
26 Observations like these suggest that there is , in fact , a felt connection between grammatical gender and sex , and that speakers perceive a covert hierarchy between masculine and feminine , mirroring ( also , of course , reproducing ) the social hierarchy between them .
27 Granted that words have a certain elasticity of meaning , the general rule remains that the judges regard themselves as bound by the words of a statute when these words clearly govern the situation before the court .
28 In general we assume that words have a standardised spelling in British English .
29 Promoters have their reasons for pricing this way ; having done so , they should see that touts provide a useful service .
30 ‘ The Tories say that ‘ competition ’ ensures that shoppers get a fair deal .
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