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

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1 Consequently , she admits , ‘ There was a part of me that secretly felt evangelism was something you should n't do to your dog , let alone a friend ’ ( Pippert 1980:16 ) .
2 He then leaned forward and , looking straight to camera , continued : ‘ Except that little weasel Fletcher .
3 In conclusion , the in vitro effects of these cytokines on ADCC activity suggest that locally produced cytokines exacerbate the lysis of colonic epithelium through the enhancement of ADCC mechanisms as well as by direct effects of these cytokines .
4 Our previous study showed that subcutaneously injected SOD was predominantly localised in extracellular compartments , and our present study showed that the SOD activity in intracellular compartments of the ratstomach did not increase after the subcutaneous injection of human SOD .
5 Plainly a lot to ask of anyone — far more than a momentary invasion of privacy , which can be bad enough — and it is an argumentative point that paradoxically makes self-sufficiency sound humble rather than arrogant .
6 The interesting finding of the study , which you did not mention , was that there were differences in pre-buyout performance between companies that successfully underwent LBOs and those that failed .
7 There are steeply progressive income taxes ( up by a third in 1990-91 ) , as well as property taxes that blatantly bleed companies to subsidise home-owners .
8 A tax on — smoke or water-polluting production processes , or a higher tax on leaded petrol or a congestion tax on vehicles in city centres , or a duty on heavy lorries that badly damage road foundations , could be justified in these terms .
9 Stanger has an appetite for apparently lost causes that rarely allows opponents to commit errors without getting punished .
10 Professor Daryl Busch and his team at the Ohio State University have mimicked the action of the body 's natural oxygen carriers , haemoglobin and myoglobin , by making the first totally synthetic iron-containing molecule that reversibly binds oxygen at room temperatures ( Journal of the American Chemical Society , vol 105 , p 298 ) .
11 If a wild and untouched horse was stabled with a domestic one that vocally demanded food , the wild horse would learn the domesticated horse 's vocabulary in a very short time and be whinnying for its breakfast too .
12 Their research on Malaysian and Singaporean women export-industry workers ( a category that mostly includes TNC workers ) shows that ethnicity and the availability of alternative employment can be key factors in the social and moral evaluation of women workers , and that there are substantial variations in the conceptions of factory work for women ( whether in TNCs or not ) across different communities .
13 Similarly , it is receptors that predominantly mediate constrictions of the renal vasculature of the rabbit ( ) , but receptors are more important in the rat kidney .
14 No work that properly considers developments in different countries and continents and pieces them together in a satisfying , narrative whole .
15 Although the animal was slow to mature ( some claimed that it would keep growing until it was six years old ) the new society was able to show that properly managed steers could reach market weights before they were two years old .
16 Eisenson ( 1962 ) was one of the first to note such effects and reported that right lesioned patients used more descriptive terms and more qualifiers than left brain damaged patients .
17 Dear Thug , I also believe that Right Said Fred should be shot ( Shot ?
18 One that effectively says stop what you 're doing and come over here when your concentration is wavering .
19 If routine interventions can be devised that effectively improve vitamin A status , the burden of xerophthalmia , other severe illness , and mortality in children will be substantially reduced .
20 Thus , for eurobond firms London has offered a pool of suitably trained labour ; in recent years , low levels of personal and corporate taxation ; a reasonable tax regime for financial instruments ( e.g. ability to issue bearer eurobonds that effectively pay interest gross and absence of turnover taxes — a particular handicap for the Swiss ) ; a supply of suitable premises ; the absence , since 1979 , of exchange controls ( although initially exchange controls were seen as an advantage , since eurobonds did not interfere with onshore sterling markets ) ; prudential and monetary regulations that have not historically tended significantly to raise the cost of funds , distort or prevent competition among domestic or international intermediaries ; English law ( widely accepted as a basis for international financial business ) ; the English language ; and political stability .
21 He joined Bell Cowan in 1964 , which was the driving force behind the merger in 1975 that eventually produced Bell Lawrie , a firm which can trace its roots back to 1815 .
22 Their routine was not the high-kicking style that eventually made John 's name .
23 Assuming that eventually ail data users handling personal data on computers are registered , what has been achieved ?
24 They gave Jack the chance to practise some of the underhand humour that eventually became part of his mystique .
25 The sub-plot has the CIA agitating and funding strikes that eventually topple Allende .
26 The Strip , at the westerly end of Sunset Boulevard and closest to the hub of the film industry , was the avenue for poseurs where every young hopeful — and plenty not so young — hung out to be discovered in one of the dozens of coffee bars that eventually gave way to rock ‘ n ’ roll clubs and then strip shows of the Sixties and Seventies .
27 It was this that eventually scuppered Horner .
28 In estimating the cost of extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy , the failures and recurrences that eventually need surgery must be taken into consideration .
29 And if any words could be found in the Statute which provided that besides paying Income Tax on income people should pay for advantages or emoluments in its wider sense ( such as I think the word " emoluments " here , has not , for reasons to be presently given ) , there is no doubt of Mr Tennant 's possession of a material advantage , which made his salary of higher value to him than if he did not possess it , and upon the hypothesis which I have just indicated , would be taxable accordingly .
30 However the main merit of Mr Frye 's analysis , at this moment , is that besides describing Tolkien 's literary category so well it further indicates , first , an inevitable problem associated with that category , and then , more indirectly , the terms in which to express a solution .
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