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

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1 The idea of the tour is so that they can actually er listen to it , but they can turn it off whenever they want and they can use their guide book to see what is in each room and if you look at the guidebook as we go round , you will find that that the things are illustrated , you know the pot .
2 And most motorists seem to accept that that the cameras are all in a good cause .
3 Thank you , does touch on that issue and refers to the point that I made earlier that that the proposals having been referred to that policy and how it meets with er more work .
4 Now if you take the table one and bearing in mind it it it 's reflects reasonably well that that the factors or the criteria which we discussed on Friday morning .
5 I believe that that the savings can be made within the Fire Service to do just that .
6 The the other factor is that that the negotiations with the bank erm to pay two pound fifty per quarter erm should have been erm reviewed last December .
7 I was going to Grant Development have come here er because they are interested in our views , er I think as far as the access goes I take your point that visibility is required , but I would imagine that that the highways department will have stipulated what is required , as they have indeed for the development next door , er where the hedge , the present hedge is going to be er set back , erm I I ca n't tell you whether , what stipulation has been made , perhaps these two gentlemen
8 A massive 42-country World Fertility Survey , commissioned by UNFPA and USAID , demonstrated that half the women who wanted no more children had no access to contraception .
9 You had to have meals-on-wheels because that was what there was , and particularly the meals-on-wheels study we did in Islington [ Barker & Noble , 1983 ] which clearly indicated that half the recipients desperately needed meals-on-wheels , but they needed a lot of other things as well , and that for the other half they were inappropriate anyway .
10 The EIA has collected evidence from Senegal , the world 's largest bird exporting country , which shows that half the birds caught die before they have even reached the airport for export .
11 If you then assumed that half the houses in the nation were converted to solar water heating in this way , you found find that you save one and a half percent of the primary fuel .
12 Their report , ‘ Quality in Traditional Housing ’ , indicated that half the faults concerned the external walls , roofs , windows and doors and related to durability and performance .
13 We have reported that half the deaths in the Glasgow neurosurgical unit followed a written note in the medical record to limit treatment , and audit of perioperative deaths in all Glasgow hospitals showed that 41% followed such a decision .
14 Where was Arbuthnot hiding , that half the police in Ireland and the IRA could n't find him , and Claire could ?
15 The table which the college provides shows clearly that half the losses would be experienced by cereal farmers , a quarter by sheep farmers and the rest by farmers with beef , suckler cow and dairy herds .
16 It turns out that half the words she 's been teaching me are all wrong .
17 It is interesting that half the carers said they would like to see the dementia sufferer in residential care .
18 Seebohm Rowntree , in his second study of poverty in York in 1936 , found that half the children in working-class families were born into poverty-stricken homes and lived below the level of ‘ dietetic and health efficiency ’ during the first five years of their lives .
19 The likelihood must be that half the trains will terminate at Stratford .
20 ‘ He told me that half the bacteria I 'm developing are lethal , ’ says Jack .
21 For our answer we have made an arbitrary assumption that he uses his car for 80% of the time for business and that half the repairs etc. relate to that car .
22 Then he took his hands from the organ and looked all over the keyboard as if to make quite sure that all the keys and stops were there .
23 And then he gave order that all the windows of the towers which looked in upon the town should be closed up , that the Christians might not see what the Moors did in their houses ; and the Moors thanked him for this greatly .
24 The result is to increase the attractiveness of non-offensive ( or non-provocative ) defence strategies , based on the principle that all the activities of the military forces — ranging from their size , structure , weapons and logistics to their training , manoeuvres and war games — can be designed to provide an effective defence , but with virtually no offensive capability .
25 An important feature of this book is that all the activities described can be used not only with the sample material provided , but also with other materials of the teacher 's own choice .
26 Er I suppose really the fact that all the streets down Road were er very narrow .
27 It is , for instance , not altogether easy to write about preferential voting without conveying however unintentionally the impression that all the preferences which are expressed will be effective .
28 When a vehicle is being weighed , the weigher should satisfy himself that all the wheels are on the plate and clear of the surround , and that no person is on the vehicle or the plate , or interfering in any way which might affect the weighing , and the engine must be switched off .
29 Perhaps the most important feature of the morning was that all the groups had discovered that there are definite skills to be used in interviewing .
30 If , as you 're monitoring the work , you think that all the groups are engaged in the tasks and working well , you can give them a little longer .
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