Example sentences of "[that] in [num] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A recent edition of Priorities , a publication of the American Council on Science and Health , reported that a Food and Drug Administration study showed that in 7,394 samples of domestic food , 65 percent contained no pesticide residues and 34 percent had residue levels below the legal tolerance level . |
2 | I believe that in 100 years people will look back on the middle of the twentieth century as a nightmare period when mankind suddenly discovered the means to destroy itself , and was seriously considering using this as a preferable alternative to reconciling differing political views . |
3 | Nevertheless by 1980 Apple was a $300 million company and personal computers had so successfully invaded the office that in 1981 IBM — which had originally scorned the little machine — introduced its first model called simply the IBM PC . |
4 | He is also proud that in 37 years he has never lost a single victim whose life he has been called on to save . |
5 | It has been estimated that in 16 years he acquired a fortune of £40,000 , despite apparently losing a lot of money in a project for the commercial manufacture of seated cast-iron horseshoes . |
6 | No wonder that in 1871 contemporaries , stupefied with horror as the city burned , saw in the excesses of the Commune a judgement of God . |
7 | Ahmet Refik , in the Ilmiye salnamesi , has , however , followed and added to Rifat Efendi , saying that in 828 Molla Fenari was appointed to the kadilik of Bursa and the muderrislik at the Manastir medrese . |
8 | It points out that in 1989 government revenue was £18.1 billion , made up of £2.9 billion from road tax , £1.5 billion from car tax , £5 billion from VAT and £8.7 billion from fuel taxes . |
9 | It was reported that in 1989 North Korea had 12 concentration camps ( four more than in 1982 ) holding 152,000 prisoners undergoing forced labour and re-education . |
10 | It seems somehow presumptuous to believe that in 1989 Europe has emerged into a cloudless world in which such things are now no longer possible . |
11 | To succeed under the Consumer Protection Act , the plaintiff would have to establish that in 1989 people generally were entitled to expect the gloves not to carry the risk of causing arthritis ( see paragraph 9–08 above ) . |
12 | Nevertheless , the ECA report noted that in 1989 food production in Africa had actually grown faster than population , for only the third time in 20 years ( 3.4 per cent , against population growth of 3.2 per cent ) , and that food imports had fallen by 12 per cent . |
13 | The origins and early history of this institution are very obscure , but we know that in 1273 Edward initiated the Recognicionesjeodorum ‘ in curie Vasconie ’ , which had assembled at St Sever . |
14 | And , just as the conquest of Morocco had been undertaken at the turn of the century to counteract the divisive effects of " the Disaster " by giving Spaniards a new , common enterprise with which to identify , one might have expected that in 1956 Franco would resort to a military campaign to save Morocco to unite the regime forces around himself and divert attention away from domestic problems . |
15 | Nor should it be forgotten , as Professor Orth has pointed out , that in 1799 penalties were prescribed for the first time for workmen as a class , not for hatters or paper makers as a special group ; in other words , the language of the act was concerned with a horizontal social division , not with the reconciliation of difference within the vertical structure of a craft . |
16 | She told us that in 1979 unemployment was increasing at the astronomical figure of two thousand three hundred a week . |
17 | It has emerged that in 1980 Wallis 's second wife , Martha Hyer Wallis , took four of his paintings , replacing them with copies , to raise a $1m loan . |
18 | I began by noting that in 1987 building societies were at the forefront of financial sector reporting , but the influence , in particular , of the EC has narrowed the gap over the past five years , so that the rules applicable to banks ( The Companies Act 1985 ( Bank Accounts ) Regulations 1991 ) and building societies ( the 1992 regulations ) are now very much in line . |
19 | However , even despite such ‘ captive ’ production , the decline of the dollar probably meant that in 1987 Japan did finally and unambiguously pass the United States in world chip production . |
20 | He wrote that in 1874 Disraeli , then Prime Minister , sent ‘ civil apologetic messages as to his inability to find an office for me ’ . |
21 | It 's a pretty complicated diagram , I would n't expect you to draw that in fifteen minutes , and explain the , the |
22 | Moreover , it should not be forgotten that in 1823 Moët & Chandon purchased the Abbey of Hautvillers , along with its vineyards , and they certainly ( to their credit ) can not be accused of allowing the legend of Dom Pérignon to die . |
23 | It is a measure of the popularity of Gary Hutchinson that in eight weeks of fundraising , the appeal total has reached almost £5,000 . |
24 | Just in case you 're tempted by knockdown prices on old style monitors , by the way , you should bear in mind that in four years time it will actually become illegal to use them at all at work . |
25 | One of his regrets is that in four series against West Indies his record is very ordinary — one innings in which he took eight wickets , but little else of note — and he is aware that not having proved himself against the best team in the world will be held against him when reputations come to be assessed . |
26 | And that by now familiar music to many of you means that in five minutes it will be the Dougie Down Under competition thanks to QUANTAS , Australia 's national airline . |
27 | But' — and he laughed — ‘ do n't forget that in five years ' time you will have changed again . ’ |
28 | If he managed economically he hoped that in five years ' time , if the public continued to buy what he wrote , he would retrieve more than he lost . |
29 | Mr Damant predicts that in five years ' time , if the ASB pursues unfudgeability rather than ‘ correct accounting principles ’ , it will be faced with dissatisfaction because accounts will not show a true and fair view . |
30 | The 40 staff execute 3,500 trades a day on average , and Vine-Lott has set himself a target of more than doubling that in five years ' time , including a considerable proportion on behalf of other institutions , such as the Halifax Building Society , for whom it is already doing work , as well as other brokers and banks . |