Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] [noun] that " in BNC.

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1 This week local Nature Trusts are asking volunteers to visit woods to search for hazlenuts that have been nibbled by dormice .
2 Telephone enquiries are also accepted and fully trained staff will be pleased to search for information that is difficult to locate .
3 When Harold Smith , the brother of F.E. , was asked for advice in organization by Huddersfield Unionists , he delivered them a lecture on Liverpool methods , and in the following year they elected F.E. Smith as their President to carry through reforms that would make Huddersfield like Liverpool .
4 It really does seem to matter for epistemology that we find some reply to the sceptic .
5 It is a ludicrous situation of expecting people in high areas of unemployment like the Falls or the Shankill to look for jobs that do n't exist , to train for jobs that are not there .
6 I did not become a Labour Member of Parliament or the Chairman of the Select Committee on Employment to work for policies that would lead to chronic mass unemployment .
7 As it stands the districts seem to be wanting their cake and eat it in that they would like er a policy restricting development in the open countryside but they do n't want it to come with baggage that is specific which says what the exceptions should be .
8 I wanted to work with people that had had er severe depression .
9 Brooke-Rose does not impose metaphors on the thematic material she employs in Out , rather she chooses to work with material that is already metaphoric .
10 Each ferret should have its own complete transmitter and locator system , and the signal emitted needs to differ from others that may be used at the same time .
11 Galadriel seems to know in advance that Aragorn will take the Paths of the Dead , Aragorn to know that he and Éomer will meet again , ‘ though all the hosts of Mordor should stand between ’ .
12 Finally , because some software houses have already started to write in copyguards that can detect Happy Chips , it has a ‘ slow it down ’ mode which prevents the copyguard from spotting the intruder .
13 erm If you take a novel like Dorothy Sayers ' Gaudy Night , which is offered as an example of a classic detective story which really is also a novel about academic life , it 's a love story , I think as a love story and as a novel of academic life it 's in many ways very good indeed , but I think as a detective story it 's completely uninteresting you know because one part has to fade in order that the , the other should come into focus .
14 First , it has meant that those genes are favoured that have the property of ‘ cooperating ’ with those other genes that they are likely to meet in circumstances that favour cooperation .
15 You also need to bear in mind that you may have other payments under existing deeds of covenant or other payments made under Gift Aid in the same tax year , and you will need to have a taxable income at least equal to the gross amount of all these payment , as well as the Gift Aid payment being contemplated , otherwise you will have to account to the Revenue for some tax .
16 You see , when you are working in plan like this it is difficult to bear in mind that machine table heights can work in your favour and they can also work against you .
17 There are plenty of people in the music business who would like it that way , but I have to bear in mind that people get ill , home-sick and miserable .
18 ( We need to bear in mind that the voices of horses differ greatly between individuals ; so a mare or foal may actually possess a deep voice , and a stallion may sometimes have quite a high voice . )
19 You have to bear in mind that the occupation did not apply to Slovakia .
20 When questioned over the possibility of the EC issuing regulations ( which must be followed exactly ) as opposed to directives ( where the result must comply , but the means by which the result is obtained is not stipulated ) 0 , the DoE pointed out that although there was ‘ a greater certainty with regard to regulation ’ it was important to bear in mind that different countries have different administration regimes and that directly applicable regulations could , therefore , cause problems .
21 But it is important to bear in mind that such misgivings are made privately .
22 The illustrations can , of course , be multiplied , but it is important to bear in mind that such cases are exceptional .
23 With teenagers you have to bear in mind that :
24 However , it is important to bear in mind that while most people break some , if not many , of the laws of their society , few people are found guilty of criminal offences .
25 It is important to bear in mind that there may be a significant amount of delinquency and crime amongst the middle classes , but we are less likely to be made aware of it .
26 But it 's important to bear in mind that even if children have left home , they may want to return to stay later on , maybe with partners and grandchildren in tow .
27 Why it should be so in the case of the United Kingdom constitution is , again , a matter of history — and perhaps it again behoves us to bear in mind that the constitution is a process , rather than a settled state of things .
28 ‘ We do have to bear in mind that we need to achieve high standards of training , but we also have to recognise that this does have a cost element , ’ Mr Armitage says .
29 But if there is a distinctive female verbal culture — and here we need to bear in mind that women themselves are not a homogeneous group — I would argue that it has been shaped by patriarchal conditions , including the restrictions placed on women 's lives and words .
30 But you have to bear in mind that we are doctors , and as such we should really do what we 're trained to do — and are expected to do . ’
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