Example sentences of "that [noun pl] [modal v] [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 However , management will be aware that vacancies will arise in the ensuing months .
2 This assumption suggests that researchers should look for the contrary , but socially shared , themes within the thinking of members of social groups .
3 Sole practitioners and two partner firms were understandably fearful that institutions might retaliate to the imposition of a hardship test ( or cap ) by restricting their conveyancing panels to firms with three or more partners , and attention was drawn to the ‘ threat ’ issued by the Halifax Building Society in this regard , as well as to the current practice of a number of lenders .
4 To facilitate this aim the Presidents had signed an Economic Action Plan for Central America and agreed that discussions should proceed on the revival of the Central American Common Market .
5 He thinks that employers will go for the cheapest labour they can .
6 Most of us appreciate the beauty that birds can bring to the garden , but when they spoil our fruit and vegetables they become less desirable garden visitors .
7 Schönhuber manoeuvred around the ‘ old Nazi ’ tag , while making plain that not only was he proud to have been in the Waffen SS , but that there was indeed something worthwhile that Germans could salvage from the Nazi era .
8 Two by-elections at the Wrekin and one at Dover showed the threat that independents could pose on the anti-spending tack , and Lord Salisbury tried to guide the agitation into respectable channels through a People 's Union for Economy .
9 Mrs Thatcher is one of the few senior politicians who takes pride in stating her political convictions and insists that policies should derive from a coherent set of principles .
10 The implications of such spending increases are either that borrowing would rise to unprecedented levels , and no doubt interest rates with them , or , alternatively , that taxes would rise to a remarkable extent .
11 ( Note that DCs may pass through the same state more than once .
12 His Albert Angelo ( 1964 ) has holes cut in its pages so that readers may see into the future , while his celebrated novel-in-a-box The Unfortunates ( 1964 ) is made up of loose-leaf sheets , intended , as a note on the box explains , ‘ to be read in random order ’ .
13 To avoid the inevitable degree of subjectivity , Mr Smith suggests that cash is king and that readers should look to the health of a company 's cash flow .
14 A set of 3-D viewing glasses will be bound into magazines , so that readers can look at a waiter who appears to be offering them a tray of cocktails .
15 The first believes that perfect competition is a useful paradigm that policymakers should take as a guide ; this is the liberalising , deregulating , competition-promoting wing of the profession .
16 There was an awareness among people outside schools that schools could choose between a range of approaches to the curriculum ( Lawton 1986 ) and there was an expectation that the chosen curriculum in , for instance , each primary school was one which would create the basis of a rational , moral and enquiring attitude to learning and to future experience .
17 ‘ It is only when European brands land on our doorsteps and people flock to buy them that manufacturers will respond to the competitive threat , ’ explains Halpern , ‘ because it 's a fact that British society has become complacent and insular . ’
18 In addition , it is not clear that pesticides will travel through the unsaturated zone as readily as nitrate does — they may , for example , be adsorbed by clays .
19 The claim for a straightforward oppositional kind of resistance also assumes that subjects can resist from a position outside the operations of power , according to the dominant inside/outside model of conventional politics .
20 The ASA 's rules mean that companies must check with the MPS to ensure its lists are up to date before they are used .
21 The CBI rejects warnings that companies will hide behind the new anti-hacking laws , rather than make efforts to keep intruders out in the first place .
22 This assumes that companies will respond to a weakening share price by improving efficiency in the long term , rather than by making short-term savings which might help the company 's performance in the short term ( known as short termism ) , to the detriment of long-term performance .
23 I:30 ) , ‘ and God makes Christ to be our wisdom , righteousness , sanctification and redemption , so that , as the Scripture says , ‘ He that boasts must boast in the Lord . ’
24 And England 's private schools , whose pupils account for a quarter of sixth-formers and of A-level passes , know that parents will pay for the prospect of a smooth path to university .
25 And above all , if the head , inside the school , is seen as someone who has a calm and consistent view of the rapidly changing priorities of school management , there is a chance that parents will come to the same view and will feel the same trust .
26 The company therefore said that salesmen must agree to a new restrictive covenant which barred them from soliciting customers for up to a year after leaving .
27 The army that fought in the Gulf was disproportionately black , so there were cries that blacks would die for a white quarrel .
28 The only stipulation to the free beer offer is that punters must arrive at the track before 3pm to claim their vouchers .
29 Mr Groenewald 's boast about hundreds of thousands of white soldiers assumes rather too blithely that ex-conscripts will rally to the cause .
30 Finally , you ought to keep in mind the possibility that circumstances may change between the time when you are first told that you are a redundancy candidate and the date when your employment ends .
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