Example sentences of "that they [adj] [verb] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | I do not say that they all had the high quality of the measure that he introduced , but they were very fine measures indeed . |
2 | If the claim that they all legitimate the existing order is to be more than a dogma it must be refined , and Althusser 's work offers no suggestion as to how this is to be done . |
3 | Their one flaw however is that they all bear the same serial number , which has been circulated to all MOT centres across the province . |
4 | Thousands of different kinds of rocks have been described and separately named , but when one gets down to their chemistry , one finds that they all have a great deal in common . |
5 | This implies the rather restricting condition that they all have the same activation energy and there are doubts upon this point being raised in recent research . |
6 | It means that they all have the same good view . |
7 | The thick bulky part of the original plant is generally of little use and should be discarded , but all the ‘ branches ’ can be planted individually to form new plants , providing that they each have a healthy terminal shoot . |
8 | Note that more than one DC can be activated via a package at the same time , up to a maximum of 10 , provided that they each satisfy the above conditions . |
9 | While cost cutting elsewhere , Wear Valley will give the clubs up to £8,000 apiece to help meet new League ground regulations with the proper proviso that they first raise a similar amount themselves . |
10 | One way in which they cooperate is to make proposals that they both know the other side will not accept . |
11 | The concept of equisignificance can now be easily explained , for to say of two symbols that they have the same meaning is merely to say that they both express the same species of thought . |
12 | The underlying basis of this consensus was a common appreciation of the political pressures facing the railway : the parties recognised ‘ that they both walked a political tightrope , and that if either party fell off the other would be likely to follow ’ ( 68 ) . |
13 | Thus in R v Stanley ( 1965 ) , Lord Chief Justice Parker explained the meaning of the terms ‘ indecent ’ and ‘ obscene ’ by suggesting that they both convey the same idea , ‘ namely , offending against recognised standards of propriety , indecent being at the lower end of the scale and obscene at the upper end ’ . |