Example sentences of "that [pron] [vb -s] a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ‘ The important thing is that everyone has a blinding time , ’ says Dermot with the quiet confidence of a promoter who never promises attractions he ca n't deliver . |
2 | It had begun to look as though the Western powers had embraced the premise that no-one kicks a cringing dog . |
3 | It is still a thoughtful , finely acted and daringly all-encompassing film , suggesting that no-one has a fixed nature . |
4 | The first point to note is that no-one has a convincing explanation for the existence of W-cells . |
5 | If we feel that someone has a high opinion of us we tend to want to live up to it , but few of us bother to make much effort with anyone we know who gives us a low rating , and this is very much the case between mothers-in-law and sons-in-law . |
6 | The discovery that someone knows a great deal about the effects of drugs and has strong opinions or whether or not a particular drug or process is or is not addictive is a strong positive indicator of addictive disease . |
7 | And of course nowadays there 's so much er things that er we use , there are so much labour saving things now that which makes a big difference . |
8 | If you can sort of say well that has been proven , this is the research , this is the system , this is the model , theorists actually enjoy that because they think well this is n't just somebody 's gut reaction , this is something that somebody spends a long time actually thinking about it considering . |
9 | ‘ Only that I have an impression that she depends a great deal on the doctor . ’ |
10 | Some would argue even that she casts a heavy shadow over present negotiations on the political future of South Africa . |
11 | Moser ( 1978 ) typically deals with the way information is broken down in interpretation from sentences and context into meaning , and one can only presume that she proposes a similar process for the reconstruction of the message in the second language . |
12 | You should also make certain that she has a good tin-opener which she can use without difficulty . |
13 | I am convinced that she has a good intelligence , and understands what is proposed as treatment . |
14 | The first essential is to see that she has a good solicitor to advise her and sort out her husband 's affairs , making sure beforehand what his fee will be for the work he is going to do for her . |
15 | Lady Bertram , on the other hand , feels that she has a fortunate marriage due to this reason of her beauty and also considers it is every woman 's obligation to show off her looks . |
16 | Ever since , she has always felt that she has a tenuous grip upon life . |
17 | Individually they are slow ; the characters are wafer thin and have little individuality ; there is no evidence that the author is excited by language ; there is little evidence that she has a developed sense of humour . |
18 | Germany 's failure to achieve political greatness further encourages the view that she has a great future before her . |
19 | That she has a personal panel of instructors is something which has allowed her to escape with fewer hours on the practice ground than most . |
20 | It is apparent to him that she has a difficult nature , at once placid and turbulent , bold and reserved . |
21 | ‘ That she has a handsome lover fifty years her junior ? ’ suggested Greg . |
22 | But I think a feminist is somebody who knows that she wants a decent life , she wants to be in control of her own destiny , and who thinks she 's entitled to that . |
23 | It 's very rare if ever that one finds a continuing document of a place and people of a particular space maintained over that length of time . |
24 | One ground for such a belief is that one has a legal right to some act or omission by another legal or natural person , although to define claims in terms of rights becomes circular : |
25 | By supposing that one has a typical member to investigate one can maximize one 's knowledge of the properties and structure common to each member of the class by examining that one member in great detail . |
26 | Well I felt that although , obviously , computers do do arithmetic and they do it very quickly , to me probably the more important aspects are the fact that one has a visual display on the computer screen which can convey information without numbers in a more rapid way to most people . |
27 | The more usual version of this theme is simply that one has a visual image of the part of the body touched . |
28 | The essential point is that one has a painful feeling of shame , and is anxious to hide one 's nakedness , usually by means of locomotion , but is absolutely unable to do so . |
29 | They identify aspects of grief and restitution , the need to feel secure and confident that all that can be done has been done to recompense for earlier losses , and that one has a safe confidante somewhere in the situation . |
30 | The fact that one has a clear conscience is not always a sign of right responses to the trials and temptations of life so much as an appropriate response to sin and guilt . |