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

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1 The 1633 ‘ Uyttenbogaert ’ fits that bill with the additional advantages of being both a representation of an important figure in Dutch religious history ( although the Rijksmuseum already has a portrait of him by Rembrandt 's contemporary Jacob Backer ) and universally accepted as authentic by the members of the Rembrandt Research Project , some of whom are Rijksmuseum curators .
2 The downward arpeggio in the last two bars will obviously be given to the clarinet , for besides the fact that it fits that instrument like a glove , it does not lie within the range of any other wind instrument .
3 And the Yucatan Canal is the waterway that separates that bit from
4 The one who rides that horse of his like a madman .
5 It is a history which quite quickly produces that excess of difference which discredits the theory which ignored it but which also questions the theoretically facile celebration of difference per se .
6 This produces that variety of note-successions so typical of the total-chromatic usage of serialism ( Example 140 ) : This exercise has been written in such a way as to reveal the considerable difficulty which inevitably occurs when using several serial forms at the same time .
7 No reliance on the imagined generosity of a mythical ‘ god ’ can provide escape from the natural order that ultimately insists that responsibility for the provision of the needs , for example of a family , lies primarily with the parents .
8 Nobody totally understands that kind of computer . ’
9 What we need to arrange is that control subjects perform some sort of task in the first phase — not one , of course , that requires them to attach different labels to the critical stimuli , but one that guarantees that attention to these stimuli is maintained .
10 However he thinks that development of the operating system as an application server will be accelerated thanks to Novell 's participation , with Unix evolving to a broader market with additional features and capabilities , including links with NetWare .
11 Anyone who thinks that consistency in principle , and not merely in strategy , must be at the heart of adjudication , has rejected conventionalism , whether he realizes he has or not .
12 Mr Burns thinks that unbundling of subsidiaries from large corporations such as Hillsdown and BP will provide opportunities in future .
13 Perhaps one agrees that expansion of the money supply and inflation do often go together but refuses to accept it as significant unless told why .
14 EVERYONE agrees that computing in the 1990s will be dominated by client-server networks , but there is no agreement about the form these will take .
15 These grants equalled nearly a third of all EEC grants that year for uranium prospecting ( £416,000 ) .
16 It follows , therefore , that out of this sum only have the character of being realised surplus-value. if we recognise that capitalist consumption — α — is a limited quantity which is relatively inelastic , represents that part of surplus-value embodied in consumption goods which is ‘ saved ’ .
17 Gerald Brockhurst 's ‘ Adolescence ’ ( 1932 ) represents that awareness by the woman of her body and sexual identity whilst Eileen Cooper 's ‘ Play Dead ’ ( 1991 ) represents her own awareness of the developing sexuality of her son .
18 In a culture where sexual metaphors are frequently used to convey racial and political conflict , the Tehuana represents that aspect of Mexico 's indigenous tradition unbowed by centuries of colonial and male rule .
19 The irrepressible Dave alternates that approach with some impressive mimic routines .
20 If there are tendencies that are different they relate to reduced inter-firm mobility for men between the ages of 25 and 45 , and the opportunity for some blue collar workers to experience wage profiles that arc in the West generally confined to white collar professions .
21 Speechreading needs that bit of extra consideration from others .
22 ‘ Orthodox medicine needs that quality of dealing with people , ’ he suggests .
23 One supposes that sort of snobbery is behind us .
24 In the next scene Macbeth , speaking alone and with no need to deceive anyone ( given the convention in Elizabethan drama that what characters say in soliloquy is true ) , admits the evil of their ‘ deep intent ’ : Duncan is ‘ clear ’ , really has that freedom from guilt or stain that his wife had urged Macbeth to assume : in a sense he tries to do so here , in his defence of Duncan 's right to be treated with love and respect , and in his invocation of ‘ pity ’ , that constant test of humanity in Shakespeare .
25 As Belle Robertson , the sextuple Scottish Champion would say , this new star of the LPGA circuit has that brand of ‘ cheek and desire ’ given to very few .
26 I mean p and if every leaflet I think has that slogan on COHSE NALGO and NUPE working together in Northumberland , that gets the message across to the members .
27 Judit , at 13 tall for her age , with russet hair , has that capacity of early teenage of one minute seeming like a woman and the next like a small child .
28 Properly made knots and splices in rope are from forty to eighty per cent efficient ; that is , the joint has that fraction of the strength of the continuous rope .
29 Then it gives me great pleasure now to erm I always knew that John al , has had something different from the rest of us you know he has that kind of air does n't he , that that status in the pulpit which you know , ?
30 Yes , we all know that he prefers consensus rather than confrontation and I suppose maybe because he has that kind of style he might be just what the doctor ordered for the nineties .
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