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

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1 Wording similar to that included below may be incorporated with the objective of retaining the benefit of an appointment regarded as quasi-arbitration in circumstances where there are risks that such benefits may be lost during the conduct of the engagement .
2 Then the risks that Hayzen associates with the ‘ Scramble ’ position may not exist , because rivals have been kept out of the market and it is too late to enter .
3 These principles and these beliefs are such an integral part of each person 's characteristics that few days will pass in the professional life of the librarian when these loyalties do not impinge upon our professional judgment .
4 And although the head count of ‘ nation states ’ within that organisation is increasing by the year , it is unlikely ever to encompass all the 4,000 or so distinct peoples that UN-sponsored studies have identified as existing in the world .
5 The methods that European governments increasingly use to keep out unwanted foreigners work to the disadvantage of genuine refugees .
6 It is through other black kids that some aspirations are fostered and others snuffed out by stories of racialism .
7 In 1 we set ourselves the problem of accounting for intuitions that some stretches of language are coherent and others are not .
8 And with the EC trade barriers coming down there are worries that counterfeit goods will be able to move into the UK with even greater ease .
9 All of these factors weaken the ties that such businesses have with the communities in which they are located and make it less difficult for them to close down and/or relocate if and when business conditions deteriorate in one country relative to other countries .
10 I mentioned in in my first contribution this morning a a concern about that those considerations that environmental considerations , even if they have been fully considered er are not there 's not an explanation provided anywhere in in the structure plan supporting material as to how that 's actually been achieved .
11 Even if this were so , the implication has been made by catholic school supporters that catholic schools have not promoted or reinforced any measure of prejudice , and that no other possible type of school could improve on them ( Daly 1975 ) .
12 It 's easy to become cynical about the vastly excessive range of features and over-complicated facias that most manufacturers seem impelled to provide .
13 Also , there is the recognition by these parties that many members of the working class , and many of their voters , do want to own their own property .
14 The danger is that this disparity will be enshrined in the formulas for distributing funds that local authorities are adopting as required by the 1988 Act .
15 I believe that these instances of hardship arise as a direct consequence of a range of Government policies such as the introduction of the student loan scheme , the decision to exclude students from various social security benefits — for example , housing and unemployment benefits — the Government 's attitude towards local authority financing with particular reference to local authority discretionary educational awards , the level of access funds that educational establishments have at their disposal and the problems relating to schemes such at the Government 's career development loan scheme .
16 ‘ That 's not to say anything against boys , but there are indicators that given opportunities in a single sex environment , girls tend to have fewer inhibitions .
17 However , it is known from the research into performance indicators that clinical teams with similar levels of resources produce different amounts of services ( Yates & Davidge , 1984 ) .
18 Just the one at Leicester but strike makes the foxes that top dogs .
19 However , there is evidence from hearing subjects that aphasia-producing lesions of the left hemisphere are associated with defects not just of execution but of comprehension of manual symbolic gestures ( Gainotti and Lemmo , 1976 ; Seron , Van der Kaa , Remitz and Van der Linden , 1979 ) .
20 But it was said by many doubters that British Airways could never be privatised .
21 The purchaser , more often than not , is a University or institutional library which has not forgotten the value of books that previous generations have preserved — in this case for the people of England , though the libraries that end up owning the books are usually abroad .
22 Ironically , a sizeable proportion of tenants would like to move , now that their offices need sophisticated computers that old buildings can scarcely accommodate .
23 THE computers that most companies want do not beat grandmasters at chess , attempt to predict the weather , or do scientists out of a job .
24 It also proposed that legislation on political parties should include stipulations that all parties should be national organizations , embracing both sides of the union ( i.e. mainland Tanzania and Zanzibar ) , and that they should not divide people along tribal , religious or racial lines .
25 Paragraphs 10 and 12 seek declarations that these defendants were ‘ knowingly concerned ’ in the alleged contraventions of the Act .
26 The allowance for spill-over effects between markets does not alter the policy implications discussed in simpler models earlier in this chapter , in other words that anticipated policies ( both monetary and fiscal ) can be used to stabilize output .
27 While he may not have said in so any words that these encounters with the press had been an " eye-opener , he did remember that he had been sincerely treated by the Journalists courtesy and by the beneficent power of journalism in the modern world . "
28 Objects of all kinds occupied every inch of space and the walls were so thickly hung with pictures that smaller drawings lay flat or propped against their neighbours .
29 The variables that Handy uses are :
30 Indeed , it is just the space between these contradictions that subordinate groups fill with their demands for legal change .
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