Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [conj] that " in BNC.

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1 Barthes 's ‘ Introduction to the structural analysis of narrative ’ deals with more than one level of narrative , but presumes that they are hierarchically arranged and that , therefore , to a certain extent , they can be discussed separately .
2 ‘ I put my headlights on to see if that would help the policemen who were obviously looking for someone .
3 Moran was the best player and mostly won but that night he attributed his winnings to the cards he had been dealt .
4 Industrial tribunals as we heard yesterday from Ian have decided they were wrongly dismissed and that indicates the standard of the union locally but poses the question of why it was impossible for our officials , from the General Secretary downwards , to effect any influence whatsoever on the attitude of Liverpool City Council .
5 No doubt the material culture of the Russians was more highly developed than that of most Siberian peoples , in so far as they built log houses with wooden floors , windows and stoves ; wore clothing made of textiles woven from linen , hemp or wool ; used steam-baths ; were able to shoot game ( and people ) more efficiently with bullets than with arrows ; used vessels made of ceramics or metal ; provided themselves with grain and vegetables where natural conditions permitted , and so on .
6 Again lateral deposition will occur , but this time the sediments will have their diachroneity rather better disguised than that of the near-shore deposits .
7 to do it do n't necessarily think that that type of event happens
8 The defendants took the view that the rule ought not so to relate and that such discussions should be free for publication without restraint or inhibition .
9 The representation of the interests of a particular group is greatly clarified if that group is also able to construct an antithetical image ( for the details of this argument see Miller 1984 ) .
10 His interest in , and knowledge of , inner-city problems is more profound and personally felt than that of most government ministers and civil servants , according to those who have spent time with him .
11 I 'm much better looking than that . ’
12 Erm you know there is no doubt in our system of government that the power is highly centralized and that local government is seen as a , a possible convenience well a public convenience probably erm something
13 We 've had that 's that 's the observation I was gon na make , that 's er just so happens that that almost the amount that 's gon na be turned round to me the following week that that
14 Now that er merely shows that that is a cattle dock .
15 Try relaxation , try yoga , try a long walk , try reading a magazine , having a bath — anything that you personally enjoy and that enhances your sense of well-being .
16 So I mean I wo n't take them now if you have thought erm and if y if you have er decided on a name I wo n't erm make a note of it now , erm but if you can all remember that that we definitely need the confirmation names sorted out .
17 I think a , that there 's another point that we should all remember and that is that it should n't just be our opinion either , we are sort of told from high certain things
18 I actually mar marked twelve closed questions as it so happened but that 's , that 's neither here nor there , that 's ju that 's just a point of reference .
19 Erm it so happened that that the group that that Britain was supporting perhaps were constitutionalists although Canning was almost erm was always rather scathing about how liberal they were and how constitutionalist they were .
20 You 've got ta say no , very severely several times is n't it sort of just push him away so tell that that 's all you can do really .
21 I do n't know mate , o I only know that that 's take us Ann and Paul and Ann and John and all them all doing all the others so
22 In recent years members of Darlington Lecture Association have heard some remarkable stories but it is probable that few have been so remarkable or so moving as that which John Hawkridge will tell on Monday .
23 We can only hope that that review will be followed by sensible action .
24 The success of Crookes and his successors with evacuated tubes meant that the passage of electricity through gases was more studied and better understood than that through solids .
25 These cells are tuned to a particular wavelength and will only respond when that wavelength alone is present .
26 Sh that th the people were willing to make promises that they did not wish to keep that they would not keep and I in all sincerity could not let them do that , and they went away extremely hurt and that particular situation unfortunately became extremely tragic later on .
27 one critical detail to observe , no matter whether we are raw novice , or long experienced and that is safety Always remember that your lines can conduct electricity , cut skin , trip passers-by , or generally cause mayhem with grass mower blades .
28 It is easy to say that the time spent considering the Matisse is time better spent than that spent considering a Gerasimov , let alone a Bouguereau .
29 On the other hand , Linnaeus , who had visited Chelsea a few months earlier , came in for severe criticism : ‘ … he has demolished not only Species but Genus without the least reason for so doing but that of having his method establish 'd and made universal , which I venture to affirm will be of very short duration ’ .
30 So what you do as a trainer in a circus you try and encourage the animal to want to the act and to reinforce it for so doing and that may be food , it may be actually just affection for the people who are training and that 's what a trainer wants to try and .
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