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

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1 Merson is controlling his diet and craving for fast-food in a bid to lose a few pounds excess weight , but spoke out yesterday to nail the lies that he has had a bust-up with George Graham over the battle of the bulge .
2 So they will continue to arise , but I think that it is right to plan to accommodate the ones that you know about .
3 The erm , importance of monitoring procedures can not be over-stressed because enable , to enable us to actually find out if these er , arrangements are working properly we do have to monitor the arrangements that are in place , and we have to provide details of monitor important for the members ' benefit , er , explaining how the budget is er , is being spent , and also bringing in information about the number of assessments , the levels of assessments , and all the other aspects that er , that make a new system work .
4 ‘ It was brilliant to hit the goals that took us to the top , and it 's got to be the best 90 minutes of my career . ’
5 If the pharmaceutical industry is really concerned about the economics of health care they would be better to curb the profits that they make through drugs sold to the NHS for which the charges are not infrequently excessive .
6 But if we are to preserve the creatures that rely directly upon water as their medium , technique and science alone are not enough .
7 We need to preserve the jobs that we have .
8 Part of the trouble stemmed from a dislike of Sandys ' refusal to heed professional advice , and from his propensity for allowing the senior civil servants in the Ministry of Defence to usurp the powers that properly belonged to the Chiefs of Staff .
9 Construct systems that are inadequate to a particular experience generate doubt and uncertainty and in this way come to promote the reconstructions that will replace them .
10 At 5 o'clock the justices indicated that they were retiring to consider their conclusions and to draft the reasons that they intended to state to support those conclusions .
11 It 's not been without pain and I pay tribute to our staff 's willingness to embrace the changes that we 've had to make .
12 They are forces which are spreading wealth faster than at any time in human history and in one 's political approach I think you either are an enthusiast anxious to embrace the forces that are at work or you are a sceptic , perhaps inclined to resist them , hoping that you can frustrate them .
13 It 's very easy within our own company to see the stages that Cadbury has gone through .
14 On his arrival , he had been satisfied to see the defences that had been set up around the hospital , and had every intention of congratulating those responsible .
15 It turns out now that reality is coming to countries all over western Europe , and although I 'm s I 'm sorry to see the difficulties that our colleagues and friends in western Europe are having erm they are beginning to realize that one or two aspirations of the so social contracts may be extremely expensive .
16 No , I do not , because I believe that the electorate will judge by results and that , even before the trusts are up and running , they will begin to see the benefits that will flow from the trusts .
17 I should like to see the rivers that flow into the estuary — and indeed the entire Bristol channel — cleaned .
18 This is an area where we can make much more progress and I 'm delighted to see the advances that have already taken place .
19 And in a recent hard-hitting editorial its editor Lee Mallett said : ‘ What is most disconcerting … is the apparent unwillingness … of leading figures in the property industry to acknowledge the distortions that are arising because of the suppression of information . ’
20 I invite Opposition Members to acknowledge the concessions that I have made and to withdraw amendments Nos. 75 and 76 .
21 As he went to the net , he raised one finger in the air as if to acknowledge the banners that proclaimed him No 1 — he might not be but the way he played last night he could be again soon .
22 In the past , many researchers have tended to underplay the problems that arose in the process of research in case they affected the evaluation of their results , although there have been a few ex post disclosures in books intended to show social research as often a messy enterprise ( Bell and Newby 1977 ; Bell and Roberts 1984 ) .
23 Does the Minister agree that , although the problem in English cities is bad — I do not wish to underplay the tragedies that have occurred there — the problem in Northern Ireland , especially in West Belfast , is much worse ?
24 And , as if to emphasise the difficulties that any prevention programme has to face , you had only to walk through any exit to find little groups enjoying a quiet cigarette .
25 The authors fail to emphasise the difficulties that arise from the lack of information available about indications for treatment .
26 My hon. Friend is right to mention the strengths of those companies , even when they face difficulties in world markets , and to emphasise the difficulties that they would face at home if a Labour Government were adding to those problems .
27 At this sort of pace we will start to lose the landmarks that give us our bearings .
28 France , therefore , had to promise the Ottomans that she would come to their aid if complications arose .
29 You want them to enjoy the books that imagination and curiosity thrive on .
30 Additionally , there have been those employers who have moved from site to site , merely to enjoy the subsidies that come from siting ‘ new ’ jobs in areas of high unemployment , and have left as soon as the period of the subsidy has come to an end .
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