Example sentences of "[pron] follow that [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But almost everywhere else in the world , railways were the necessary engine of the nineteenth-century world economic integration which followed that revolution .
2 There is no conclusive proof , but it is a reasonable assumption , that the Romans knew the place for it lies on the line of their road , which followed that ridge , between their settlements at Manchester and Buxton .
3 1156 ; Guest [ 1964 ] 1 W.L.R. 1273 , and Gore Justices [ 1966 ] 1 W.L.R. 1522 , which followed that reasoning must be treated as overruled .
4 For each match , a new active word edge is created carrying the phonemic symbol just matched , and a pointer to the node in the tree which follows that phoneme branch , indicating the set of phonemes which are expected to follow such a beginning .
5 ‘ Did you follow that trail of paint towards the clearing they talk about ? ’
6 She followed that effort by finishing a length second to Rainbow Lake in a Listed race at Newbury and is clearly improving .
7 She followed that effort by finishing a length second to Rainbow Lake in a Listed race at Newbury and is clearly improving .
8 An he says , oh , you follow that road there and take the first left and — ( Furiously ) .
9 When you follow that voice , you will find doors opening everywhere .
10 So that 's the training cycle and we believe that if you follow that approach to training , then it will help you to be very effective and successful .
11 And then if you follow that procedure I 'd be grateful .
12 ‘ He gave the right advice to the industry and we followed that advice , ’ said Mr Henderson .
13 ‘ So we follow that route , ’ Paula said firmly .
14 On mainland France , we follow that policy strictly , in line with our European allies .
15 There is direct precedent in the first case , and he knows that sound strategy might require him to follow that precedent .
16 Does it follow that Citizen Kane is seeking the BS5750 business accreditation for playing and performances ?
17 He argued that since crime , as officially recorded , was greatest amongst the working class , it followed that anomie too must be greatest in that social stratum .
18 From this it followed that kingship , like fatherhood , was a divine institution to which resistance was not merely impolitic but sinful .
19 It followed that regard must be had to the contractual obligation under consideration , and not to the contract as a whole .
20 From this he argued that , since only the present ‘ is ’ , it follows that past and future are alike meaningless , the only time is a continual present time and what exists is both uncreated and imperishable .
21 Since the public interest is the foundation of the legitimacy of companies , it follows that society is entitled to ensure that corporate power is exercised in a way that is consistent with that interest .
22 It follows that society is entitled to insist , for example , that companies are equipped with governance structures adequate to enforce a commitment to profits on the part of management and to promote the efficient operation of the business .
23 Therefore it follows that odour emissions can be a ground for refusing planning permission or imposing conditions to prevent or reduce any possible odour pollution .
24 If , as the psychodynamic school believes , obesity is fundamentally a psychological problem , it follows that treatment should ideally be aimed at the mind rather than at the body , and that treatment aimed at the body will leave the underlying psychological problem unaltered or even aggravated , similar objections were and still are levelled against behavioural treatments which allegedly deal only with ‘ symptoms ’ , leaving the underlying problem to spring up anew .
25 It follows that assessment procedures — the unit credit which attaches to every unit — should reflect all four aspects of achievement and involve an element of pupil self-assessment .
26 It follows that management 's shares can not be worth more than par value at the date they subscribe .
27 It follows that selection should also take account of other factors , such as an interest in the NHS , ability in senior decision-making groups and a tolerance of the ambiguities of public service management .
28 Thus it follows that skill training is more generalised and generalisable and is better fitted to the overall role of human operators .
29 If the less frequently attacked male groin must be protected by a guard , then it follows that chest protectors ought to be compulsory for female contestants .
30 It follows that marking is entirely done on the basis of the police report and is therefore dominated by it .
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