Example sentences of "[prep] that [noun sg] [adv] [art] " in BNC.

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1 that for that quarter so the
2 For that reason alone the study will have started to achieve its objective of generating further and fundamental debate on what continues to be an unresolved and unsatisfactory state of affairs .
3 It reads : ‘ For as long as any rugby player living in the Republic of South Africa is the victim of racial discrimination under the laws of that country neither the WRU , nor any of its member clubs , will become involved in any matches organised under the authority of the SARB .
4 And had n't she taken advantage of that fact just a tiny bit ?
5 This again is an indictment on our society when people are being forced into that position again the C E C asks you to accept this .
6 From that day onwards the word was never heard again .
7 From that day onwards the situation worsened .
8 From that moment onwards the " I " or Self focussed attention on itself by a powerful fascination .
9 From that time onward the flow of migrants from the West Indies to Britain has declined steadily : recently there seems to have been a net outflow .
10 From that point onward the story is a bonus but overall you read for the quality of language and the quality of seeing rather than the material .
11 It is , however , quite easy to pass the point at which an organisation of this sort feels that it can afford a central staff and from that point onwards the central staff becomes essential and the field staff end by servicing its needs and growth .
12 He was in that sense truly a presidential candidate for the 1980s .
13 In that year also the first Boulestin restaurant was opened in Leicester Square .
14 Caution after that , caution even after the criminal penalty was lifted , caution even when the social stigma was reported extinct , and in that caution only the occasional pleasure of a chance taken and soon regretted .
15 If it is not working in that time then the chart should be discontinued .
16 Yes I heard a very interesting conversation on the way down here in that programme Just a Minute
17 ‘ One person , ’ he said , looking up , ‘ bought both poisons in that jar about a week ago , as well as a rare odourless potion which can stop the heart but not be traced . ’
18 If we are prepared to look at things in that light then the range of choice becomes much wider .
19 Many Jews , especially outside Palestine , became Hellenized , but inside that country only the Sadducees were sympathetic to Hellenic culture .
20 Under this pressure , all ordinary human ambivalence and doubt is outlawed : adopters become guilty or angry when the relationship does not proceed according to the fantasy or reality of ordinary parenting ; children suppress their fantasies of an alternative life with birth parents — or hold on to that fantasy all the more tenaciously — and birth mothers , in particular , are pushed into a denial of their own experience and feelings .
21 The pater was saying something to that effect only the other day .
22 The Labour party seems to reverse its policies on that issue twice every decade .
23 No scene , perhaps , in The Lord of the Rings is more moving or more suggestive than the one in which Sam and Frodo , in Mordor , see the wind changing and the darkness driven back , and then as if in answer to prayer come upon a trickle of water : ‘ ill-fated ’ and ‘ fruitless ’ in appearance , but at that moment seemingly a message from the world outside , beyond the Shadow .
24 ( At that time even the most optimistic in the UUUC camp assumed that some of the latter would be returned . )
25 At that time almost no one bought ready-made dresses in Italy .
26 Norman Porter , the general secretary of the National Union of Protestants and at that time still a close colleague of Ian Paisley , had been asked by a number of conservative clergymen to stand against the Minister for Education in order to protest against amendments to the Education Act which increased and regularized state funding of Catholic schools .
27 This developing experience was at that time still a precarious feature : in the last twelve years of Edward I , after all , several parliaments met without any shire or borough representatives being summoned .
28 Anyway I started there , I got the ten and three a week and er eventually not very good , at that time quite a lot of short time .
29 In Hornby 's view , for example , Hatfield ‘ had a sort of Academic Board but it was not a very coherent one ’ , and yet Hatfield 's Academic Board was at that stage probably the farthest advanced in its production of a development plan .
30 The Macmillan government applied to join , the Heath government signed the treaty as it was , but at that stage basically the nation states retained the veto process which had been injected by de Gaulle into the original treaty .
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