Example sentences of "[that] [adv] [vb -s] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Knowing that nearly every parish in the country had their own guild or fraternity at one time , it is all the more frustrating to learn that little exists from the once vast stock of pre-Reformation funerary artefacts . |
2 | These stéles discoïdales are formed of a roughly engraved stone disc on top of a sturdy , tapering base and you find them either buried well into the earth so that little shows above the ground except the disc or else standing clearly up above it ( see Plate I ) . |
3 | The man that rarely smiles on camera , dresses like crap and is quietly emerging as the biggest sex-symbol despite-everything since Roland Rivron . |
4 | TEARDROP EXPLODES Vox Teardrop & Phantom XII Looking cool is something that rarely happens to me these days , but strapping on either of these reissued Vox guitars it 's hard to tell if it 's grey hairs or ice … |
5 | As part of the 150th Anniversary celebrations the East Anglia Section decided to target an age group that rarely features in RSC activities — primary school children . |
6 | Whichever the case , things are so awry that God himself is afraid and immediately jumps to the conclusion that they mean to seize the power that properly belongs to him . |
7 | Well I think that rather depends on saying fairly concisely what it is we mean by science . |
8 | Well I think that rather depends on saying fairly concisely what it is we mean by science . |
9 | As emphasized in Section 17.4 , linear stability theory does not in principle predict the type of motion that eventually occurs as a result of this growth — non-linear processes must always come into play before that stage . |
10 | He then uses much the same repertory of colours and patterns and fin displays as he did for aggression , but in a female these trigger a series of different responses that eventually culminates in the laying of eggs . |
11 | What emerges is an attitude of resourcefulness that eventually grows into a mood of self-sufficiency and then into independence . |
12 | They are able to take in chemicals and convert them into usable energy and to synthesize all the components of the cell during growth that eventually leads to cell multiplication . |
13 | Attention is drawn to the fact that , while the balance conditions ( 7.9 ) and ( 7.10 ) for the Maxwell L-C bridge are independent of frequency , those for the Hay version are frequency dependent , so that for good results with this version an extremely pure sinusoidal source is needed and , ideally , a detection system that only responds to the same frequency . |
14 | ‘ Carter 's a queer that only goes for straights ? ’ |
15 | But it 's an exception to the hearsay rule that only applies against the maker . |
16 | Whether government departments retain information that only exists in electronic form depends upon whether electronic documents are classed as ‘ official documents ’ . |
17 | Headway possesses the unmistakeable sureness of touch that only comes through authors ' long and direct involvement with ELT at grass roots level . |
18 | Exercise on this level will calm the mind , improve digestion and increase the metabolic rate of the body , enabling us to detoxify and provide the vitality that only comes with balance . |
19 | What , what , what , what you 're , what we 're doing erm and hopefully seek their support on , on some areas that literally falls within the Regional er Liaison Group 's remit anyway . |
20 | He 's a floating penguin that literally toots with joy when he is pushed down under the water . |
21 | Rentokil and Retail Cleaning is not a partnership that naturally springs to mind . |
22 | We have found our technique most useful when the stimulus of a light meal follows fasting , a state that naturally occurs in most people at breakfast time . |
23 | Er where you 've got a note that obviously goes over a beat as in that one there |
24 | It 's a talent that obviously runs in the family . |
25 | Once rid of the tasks of allotting routes and setting fares , governments could concentrate on the function that rightly belongs to them : expanding the capacities of airports and air-traffic-control systems . |
26 | This is a problem that rightfully belongs to the subject of the electrical properties of materials , so I can not say very much about it . |
27 | In the meditation it is given in Latin , the Middle English version from the Primer is : This tone of penitent confidence in the grace made available through Christ dominates the longer meditation which sustains a formal devotional element that constantly acts as a buffer between the meditator and the subject of his meditation . |
28 | Neglect yourself and self-doubt begins to creep in and that swiftly turns to depression . |
29 | In other cases , a simple diversion , often involving the use of a private crossing that already belongs to British Rail , could be brought into use to enable people to cross in safety . |
30 | Women do not actually sound like children , and men sound even less like Great Danes — except in the light of a culturally-mediated analogy that already trades on sexism . |