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

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1 It seems rather strange that the accuracy for navigating/surveying now , by state of the art technology , is of the same order as has been used to set down the Circles of Time several thousand years ago .
2 Ah yeah , I , I would think myself that I was also , er rather sorry that the boy doing had just shown how silly they
3 It may appear rather odd that a book on an emerging language devotes a chapter to the process of translating meaning from that language to another and vice versa ( especially when this second language will be , virtually always , English ) , but the development of BSL , and its community of users is so bound up in its treatment by hearing people that it is essential to have some discussion on the matter .
4 When he thought about it , Nigel did find it a little odd that a photographer should return after he 'd finished a job .
5 There is no space here to examine this issue in detail , but it is at least a little odd that the work of such pragmatic theorists as Grice , Horn , Levinson and Sperber and Wilson , which has been successful in many areas and which has also cast serious doubt on speech-act-based approaches , is never mentioned in a book which explicitly claims the superiority of Austinian approaches .
6 It is wholly acceptable that the patient should have been persuaded by others of the merits of such a decision and have decided accordingly .
7 There may be occasions when it is quite right or entirely understandable that an asylum applicant did not make his claim until he had been here for some time .
8 Even so , it took all his self-control not to lose his temper with Madge Grimsilk , for Therese , in the dark sapphire Rosa Ponselle gown , studded all over with flashing blue stones and with the huge peacock train spreading out behind her , was outstanding , so outstanding that the rest of the cast , pleased with their own designs but quick to recognize a ‘ star ’ outfit , burst into a little patter of applause .
9 Richard Dorment of the Daily Telegraph said : ‘ What a pity a dealer did not take him aside and tell him the work he proposed to exhibit was unexhibitable … a visual boredom so total that no amount of metaphor or allusion can give it the kiss of life ’ .
10 The silence was so total that the auditorium might have been empty .
11 Yes , but it seemed so odd that the door was standing open .
12 Novell is so rich that the Unix acquisition is relatively small potatoes .
13 For a moment or two she sat watching a breeze ruffle the calm surface of the hotel pool — the bright blue water was so inviting that the moment you got out you wanted to get straight back in again .
14 From time to time there are cases where the provocation is so gross and so strong that a court imposes a very short prison sentence or even a suspended sentence for the manslaughter — typically , cases where a wife , son , or daughter kills a persistently bullying husband or father — and such cases raise the more general question of whether provocation should ever be a complete defence to homicide or to other crimes .
15 To this day , public fascination with the disaster remains so strong that a flourishinhg market has developed for Titanic memorabilia .
16 The concentration of the cast was so strong that the mood was well maintained .
17 But when the Central Policy Review Staff ( the ‘ Think Tank ’ ) had suggested in the early eighties that they mount a full-scale investigation into the practices and abuses of the professions , they discovered that the influence of the lawyers upon Number 10 was so strong that the proposal was sat upon and then returned , with a suggestion they confine themselves to teachers and social workers .
18 The resistance to devolution was so strong that the government was forced to accept that the bills should be ratified by referenda .
19 It seemed to the court that in its current form the civil components of the process of judicial review were so strong that an application which claimed the civil relief authorised by section 21K was to be regarded as a civil cause or matter .
20 He was so low that a wing-tip touched the ground , causing a ground loop .
21 In the case of Jupiter the temperatures are about 300 to 400 million K , though the number density is so low that no glow is visible .
22 In practice the probability of such words occurring in adjacent positions is so low that the problem is negligible .
23 Recovery will come when the country 's creditors decide that the return on money in the bank has fallen so low that the price of assets has become cheap .
24 The danger is , of course , that the price may be so low that the business fails to generate sufficient revenue to cover its operating and/or capital costs .
25 However , the number of people who return to education once they have left school or college is so low that the age of finishing full-time education is often used as a simple indicator .
26 And when the rain stops , the beavers may have to build them up again to prevent the level of the lake from falling so low that the entrance to the lodge is exposed .
27 Those belonging to Pan American were called Clippers ; they flew the Pacific and the Atlantic and , when storms were violent , they flew so low that the spray from the waves broke over the aircraft .
28 Recall that it exists where the interest rate is so low that the demand for money becomes perfectly interest-elastic .
29 It is , therefore , perhaps understandable that the law continues to cover truancy in its broadest sense , using regular attendance as its yardstick .
30 The Secretary of State seems to think that we should be so grateful that the Government have promised that the poll tax will go that we should not look too closely at what will replace it .
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