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

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1 I knew he had a private hope that some day he might make a book with them .
2 It is because the attender is unobservable and can only be inferred from retrospective description that mental experiencing includes a strong tendency to dichotomize the ‘ I ’ ( attender ) from the ‘ me ’ ( self-description ) ; a dichotomy that parallels that between ‘ I ’ and my body .
3 An illustration of the economic damage that flexible exchange rates can inflict is provided by the experience of the UK during 1979 – 81 .
4 You see I , I feel a bit disa , look at that building that that 's
5 Apart from the inherent improbability that trained intelligence agents would simply add an armed suitcase bomb tagged for New York-JFK to a pile of international luggage waiting to be loaded in Luqa and then trust to luck that , unescorted , the bomb would get through the baggage-handling and security arrangements of two other major airports and be loaded aboard the target aircraft before the timer triggered an explosion , there remained the problem with the provenance and reliability of the Frankfurt baggage-list that was said to have identified the suitcase in the first place .
6 Second , the study looks at the emotional reactions that young children actually display .
7 It is in the locality ( defined in physical terms ) and not at the national or regional level that practical working-class politics are developed ( p 40 ) .
8 Erm but what happened then is er tended to get the main bearing supply for the normal spindles that manufactured and built .
9 They also offer relatively modest time allocations for practical and prevocational subjects in upper primary classes , a feature which may reflect a lack of real conviction by syllabus panels to respond to the political creed that such studies are necessary and profitable for primary level children , but may also be born of a firm realistic assessment of the lack of money and materials to make such studies workable .
10 Where Clarke was wrong was in his broad assessment that British science is being adequately funded .
11 In view of the understandable difficulty that this inelegant and complex piece of legislation presented to these people , one must stand in awe at what one Member , Sir Michael Havers , had the temerity to say at the Third Reading of the Bill : ‘ One of the great ambitions of successive Parliaments is to simplify the laws that they pass and make them more readily understood . ’
12 It was interesting to note that given the diversity of political opinions that such a strong consensus could exist around the issue of government economic initiatives for the area .
13 From her expression , it appeared she had little faith that this august personage would oblige .
14 In part , the mothers need the emotional support that such a communal life-style can bring but on the other hand , many simply do not have anywhere else they can safely go .
15 On I May he left for a Mediterranean cruise in the vain hope that this might cause an improvement .
16 It could be that the outer estates are approaching some kind of basic ‘ subsistence , level , where disposable income has reached such a low level that future increases in unemployment will begin to have a smaller effect in reducing local incomes per head , simply because so many people are already dependent on state benefits .
17 That is , the underlying holdings of serious reference works , older classics , local history and other works of more than ephemeral interest would fall to such a low level that most readers ' questions and serious enquiries could not be answered without outside help .
18 Compromise deprives a thinker of the emotional base that all objective thinking requires .
19 HE REALIZED IN THAT instant that this was the love he had been hoping for , his quest fulfilled .
20 For she had known in that instant that this dark-haired man before her was destined to leave his mark on her soul .
21 And I remember an earlier epoch when the geologists were told by the physicists , including the great Lord Kelvin himself , that they were foolish to postulate so many millions of years for earth history , when it could easily be calculated from classic physics that this was quite impossible .
22 The Israeli army denied claims by Islamic Jihad that three of their members flying hang gliders to attack Israel were shot down on Oct. 29 in southern Lebanon .
23 I just concentrated on making sure that it was comprehensive in terms of description and it was obvious from that description that certain choices and evaluations had been made .
24 If the commercial benefits to Visa of retaining the data do not outweigh the costs of their retention then there can be little hope that such data will be accessible to historians in the future .
25 Reagan 's campaign for governor in 1966 was a response to the same shifts in public opinion that Goldwater had attempted to exploit , but it was not only in political attitudes that southern California was ahead of its time .
26 There must also be professional judgement that further incidents are likely .
27 Above all , it is at the European level that expanding aid programmes could be devised to stimulate a widening of trade and recovery in the south and east .
28 It is a telling comment on ninth-century political practice that this humiliation , according to Nithard , brought Bernard into a more accommodating frame of mind .
29 Because there is little wind that high to split the particles up , it could stay there for years .
30 It is in that setting that these two problems belong .
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