Example sentences of "[vb pp] [pron] that [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Cancer has taught me that life is n't a dress rehearsal , this is it and you only get the one chance .
2 It had further taught them that bomb casualties in Protestant districts frequently included a substantial proportion of Roman Catholics .
3 One is to include corporate dummy variable of the intercept and see whether it 's T ratio or significantly different , is , sorry it 's greater than two right or we can use an F test , right , now that F test that 's given me that formula in the middle of the page is a very important test which was developed by a chap called Chow and as a result it become known as the Chow test and it 's a , it 's a test for parameter constancy , er do we have constant parameters in our model now it tells you how to compute this Chow test , in this particular case we 're only dummying the intercept , the Chow test gives exactly the same results of T tests , right , erm we wo n't bother going through it , if you want to go through this er sheet in your own time calculate that , that Chow test and essentially what it involves is splitting with the s the whole sample now into two sub-samples , right , the first sub-sample , right , is peacetime , the second sub-sample wartime , right , and you just compare the residual sum of the squares on the unaccounted for variation , right , between actual and fitted values , just compare the residual sum of squares between these two sub periods , right and if you use the formula that 's given there that will come out with exactly the same result , well in actual fact you can square , if you square the F statistic you get calculating one formula you will get T value , got from er the computer right , the er , the sheet goes on to say how we can er use dummy variables in slightly more complicated ways , right , we could see actually see whether the income or price elasticities of demand changed .
4 Cos at the end of the day you 've worked hard and you ai n't earned nothing that day .
5 How she would have loved to have permitted herself that gesture , then to have stalked out of the room and slammed the door .
6 Having , having booked it that morning
7 She had not even phoned them that morning to explain her absence .
8 They might be the nicest person , but prison has made me that way .
9 Well I do n't , I have n't seen one that size .
10 Also , MacQuillan 's face was well known and it was inevitable that someone had noticed him that lunchtime .
11 Well he thought your dad was buying that mould from Jim so he did say that , he , he 'd lent him that book on how to actually build them , but that 's
12 Wilson felt only dimly aware of Miss Blagden 's kindness but later came to realise this sign and evidence of human concern had most probably saved her that time from real madness .
13 Jasper , her elder brother , had refused from the first to dress up for this party and wore his school jeans and Western shirt , though school had not seen him that day .
14 Not if you 've turned it that way cos then you wo n't be able
15 We do things like this because we have always done it that way .
16 In the social dialectology carried out in Belfast , however , quantification was necessary : if it had been possible to do the work without quantifying , we would have done it that way !
17 But it would have been simpler to have done it that way I think .
18 But then I found that they had n't done it that way .
19 But the essence of your answer to the questions that have been asked over the last twenty minutes or so , is we have n't done it that way .
20 When we did all work together , all the different pieces worked together , and you could just have a card each and you could have just done it that way .
21 Should n't of done it that way .
22 Because we 've always done it that way .
23 " I 've never seen it that way before . "
24 She had seen it that morning , black and sleek , leaving hardly a ripple behind it , slipping silently away on the morning tide .
25 The car has made it that way and it would be almost impossible for public transport to knit it together in the way that the railways did in the nineteenth century .
26 If Poland was backward it was not because the Poles wanted it so , but because Germany and the other partitioning powers had made it that way , and because the Allies had failed to provide the necessary capital to finance Poland to do the job they required .
27 ‘ It 's only hard because between us we 've made it that way , ’ he murmured softly .
28 Though he could n't have said what that purpose might be .
29 ‘ I could have saved myself that fee . ’
30 You 've turned us that route because your Government have switched away from what matters from British people that we represent .
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