Example sentences of "[vb past] that such [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To reflect this , the Consultative Paper proposed that such centres could be offered the opportunity to accept devolved responsibility for quality elements normally administered by SCOTVEC , provided that the internal quality systems in place were appropriate to each element for which devolved responsibility was being sought .
2 Last month British Telecom promised that such transmitters would be available of Unisat .
3 They also demonstrated that such differences in hypertension were present in the prediabetic state .
4 Observers doubted that such targets would be achieved ; of 158 clean-up projects ordered in January 1989 only 10 had begun by October .
5 C. Taylor and W. Page Faulk found that such women often have white cell antigens ( HLA ) that are unusually similar to those of their husbands .
6 But others ( G. Cantor 1955 ; Goss and Greenfield 1958 ; Katz 1963 ; Ellis and Muller 1964 , experiment 2 ) , found that such controls showed inferior performance .
7 Graham J found that such information was not readily available and went on to say that the information had been obtained as a result of considerable labour and expense on the part of the plaintiffs and was therefore valuable and , it followed , confidential .
8 The majority of the respondents who addressed the issue agreed that such methods should not be required , giving as their reasons complexity and subjectivity .
9 The Widdicombe Committee recommended that such attendance should remain possible subject to two safeguards :
10 It is , therefore , recommended that such covenant be insisted upon .
11 The courts ruled that such companies only had the powers specifically granted to them by Parliament , and the ruling was extended to local authorities despite the fact that they were independently elected , not mere private corporations .
12 The Supreme Court , overturning a ruling by the High Court on March 16 , 1989 , ruled that such offences constituted political offences under Section 50 of the Extradition Act 1965 , and that the principles laid down in the case of Finucane also applied in Carron 's case .
13 The court ruled that such action was contrary to the 1950 European Convention of Human Rights , which guaranteed , to any individual deprived of freedom , the right to a review in a court of law , as well as the right to contest the reasons for a reimprisonment .
14 Under an act of George I weavers could take their complaints to magistrates , but Temple himself admitted that such recourse would mark a man and reduce his prospects of obtaining work .
15 ( 2 ) Where a competent objector desires to object in relation to any application , he shall , not later than seven days before the meeting of the licensing board at which the application is to be considered : ( a ) lodge with the clerk of the board a written notice of objection which be signed by the objector or his agent and shall specify the grounds of his objection and ( b ) intimate his objection to the applicant in the manner provided by subsection ( 3 ) below , and an objection shall not be entertained by the licensing board unless it is proved or admitted that such objection was intimated to the applicant as aforesaid .
16 Weber argued that such groups could overlap class distinctions eg. the present day Labour Party .
17 argued that such inferences are stored in memory along with the information explicitly contained in the passage , with the result that when subjects are given a recognition test they will falsely identify the inference as having occurred in the passage .
18 Thorndyke argued that such stories are easy to remember because they have a particular structure .
19 The CBI and other industrial representatives argued that such incentives already existed in the form of the employee 's salary , the training undergone at the firm 's expense , and the provision of a suitable working environment .
20 We argued that such statements reflect the growing consensus nationally about what constitutes good practice in the teaching of English .
21 They argued that such gifts could influence the buyer 's objectivity , and that they should be restricted to such nominal items as calendars , diaries , pens , etc .
22 In reply , Rathbone argued that such feminists had overlooked the fact that ‘ some aspects of our whole social fabric [ are ] man-made through generations to suit masculine interests and glorify masculine standards ’ .
23 There were those who argued that such action would alienate world opinion and sabotage the chances of a diplomatic solution .
24 Some authors argued that such feedback was the primary signal for hunger while others argued that the signal came from elsewhere .
25 The old regime believed that such accountability and planning ran counter to the culture of academic autonomy .
26 One chief executive believed that such thinking was so important to his organization 's success in a high-tech field that he staged a highly imaginative top management meeting .
27 Levi-Strauss ( 1969 ) noted that such taboos certainly exist and a notorious modern example of it is found in the immorality laws of South Africa which forbid sexual relations between blacks and whites .
28 For , in addition to any ‘ genetic inheritance ’ , he noted that such individuals frequently suffered from an interlude in which motherly care was unavailable .
29 Major appealed to him to withdraw the threat to break off talks with the South African government [ see above ] , but at a press conference Mandela reiterated that such negotiations would cease on May 9 unless de Klerk acted to halt township violence .
30 Several of the earliest proponents of intelligence testing assumed that such tests would show substantial differences in intelligence between races .
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