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

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1 But I think that secretly the vice-chancellor and the other grown-ups were delighted by this kind of behaviour , as it proved beyond any reasonable doubt that we were students and they were teachers .
2 I thought that presumably the bill was still divided proportionately between the countries .
3 Nottingham 's own historian , Dr Chambers , reckons that altogether the slum property of the town produced an annual return of forty thousand pounds , some of which went to building-clubs financed by small artisans .
4 We say that locally the surface is Euclidean and distances are given by the differential Pythagoras equation where dx , and dy are the coordinate separations of nearby points on the surface .
5 Owen thought that rather a pity as she had seemed very competent , quite capable of sorting out both Yussuf and his wife .
6 Notice that effectively the spectrum of the unit step function has been derived by multiplying it by a factor which makes the Fourier integral converge .
7 As far as the army was concerned , I had been told in October 1945 that effectively the matter was ended with the presumption of death .
8 It was hoped that a small part of those works could stay in operation , renovating locomotives and rolling stock and that eventually a heritage museum could be set up on the site .
9 The catalogue recalls that in 1938 Brame and Lorenceau held an exhibition of Rousseau 's work which contributed to the revival of interest in that artist 's work , and goes on to express the hope that eventually a museum devoted to Barbizon painting may be set up .
10 That is , in periods of high unemployment , the government would expand aggregate demand : this would reduce the unemployment but at the same time tend to create inflationary pressure so that eventually the government would have to reduce aggregate demand again .
11 For once , both sides want to win over waverers ; and if Labour scraps the block vote , there is a fair chance that eventually the merits of the arguments will determine the policy Labour chooses .
12 So it was a way of getting out and I knew that eventually the council would have to rehouse me .
13 Each additional storey may be given its own roof so that eventually the building looks like a Chinese pagoda .
14 But in the evening , on what was to prove his last visit , the prisoner was so long and so quiet that eventually the carabiniere who had remained to guard him banged on the door .
15 All that is necessary is that eventually the consequences , however tortuous and indirect , feed back and affect the success of the replicator at getting itself copied .
16 Each department takes part in a six monthly review of its teaching quality based on the diary records , and Dr Pearson thinks that eventually the school would be able to move teaching contracts to where the good teaching is .
17 Originally it catered for pupils from 5 to 16 , but local reorganisation means that eventually the school will only accommodate children of secondary school age .
18 He deliberately locked the french windows and stayed inside the room , knowing that eventually the night visitors , whoever they were , would have to make a move .
19 What we must cling to as these atrocities go on is that eventually the IRA will be crushed .
20 Both effects diminish the energy received so that eventually the signals are undetectable .
21 If you have an even number of needles , after two rows every needle has been knitted once ; whereas if you have an odd number of stitches , then the same needles have been knitted on both rows and will go on being knitted on subsequent rows so that eventually the carriage jams .
22 In the inflationary expansion one might expect that eventually the symmetry between the forces would be broken , just as supercooled water always freezes in the end .
23 Notice that eventually the cycle will converge on the new equilibrium level of income of £1,020 ( that is , an increase of £20 since the multiplier is 2 in this example ) .
24 This means that these 43 people have lost any right to apply for an exit visa , whereas normally Jews waiting to leave keep on applying hoping that eventually the visa will be granted .
25 Is it when the purchaser puts his money in or is that merely an offer which the machine accepts ?
26 I agree with my hon. Friend that perhaps a moral can be drawn from that .
27 No , I thought that perhaps a stroll down Unter den Linden — such memories for me there — and then I have another idea .
28 A survey by Apted suggested that perhaps a quarter to a third of university libraries have selection policy statements of some kind .
29 Alison waved from the window of the departing taxi and Celia waved back , a sudden feeling of depression taking hold of her to such an extent that she abandoned her idea of looking for a pram and set off , rather aimlessly , in the direction of Leicester Square in the faint hope that perhaps a cinema might take her mind off things .
30 It has been suggested that perhaps a Fairey Overdrive would give more flexibility between gears .
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