Example sentences of "[adv] [vb pp] that [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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31 | There the evidence before him merely disclosed that the defendants whilst being employed by the plaintiffs simply made plans or preparations for their future post termination activities . |
32 | Previously self-reliant communities are now so dispersed that the whereabouts of family members remains unknown . |
33 | However , my predecessor , Bishop John Bickersteth , who for many years had been an advocate for issues of conservation , quite rightly protested that the Archbishop was saying no more than the biblical tradition states ! |
34 | A It is highly recommended that the user keeps the hardware on their person at all times . |
35 | Assuming that you have to ‘ go it alone ’ , it is highly recommended that the model be fitted with floats , or some form of training undercarriage . |
36 | On July 25th , 1908 , the rails forced their way into Denwood , and those who had been waiting so long and patiently considered that the prizes were theirs at last . |
37 | Bearwood is so designed that the ladies get no closer to the offices than the door between the transverse and the butler 's corridor . |
38 | Yet if the dances of Vera and Natalia in A Month in the Country and Juliet in Romeo and Juliet are examined it will be discovered how the technical content is so designed that the steps , poses and gestures show how changing circumstances are affecting the individuals . |
39 | But environmentalists have long claimed that the scheme has been underfunded , badly run and above all exploited by the tourist trade . |
40 | The important truth about this story is not that Zacchaeus had a change of heart as though he had suddenly decided that the way back to God was through good works of charity . |
41 | She had spent months regretting her experience and crying over it , but suddenly decided that the past was the past . |
42 | Alternate benches were so made that the back could be swung over so that by a simple movement you had two benches facing each other instead of one behind the other and back-to-back with the adjoining classes , the teacher sitting on a chair between the ends of the benches . |
43 | Fortunately for the horse ( and even the owner ) , the editor rightly answered that the horse was just being nice , pleasant , and submissive ; and his relaxed ear were showing his non-resistance to her authority . |
44 | Ramblers have long argued that the army 's needs should be subjected to independent scrutiny , adding the independent National Parks Review panel had agree with the group . |
45 | Reformers had long argued that the credibility of the legislature in the eyes of the public and its ability to compete with the executive were both weakened by a chaotic Congressional budgetary process . |
46 | We have long argued that the Post Office scheme is detrimental to the survival of townland names . |
47 | The whole question of the burden of proof was nicely summed up in the Esso case by Lord Hodson where he said : It has been authoritatively said that the onus of establishing that an agreement is reasonable as between the parties is upon the person who puts forward the agreement , while the onus of establishing that it is contrary to the public interest , being reasonable between the parties , is on the person so alleging … |
48 | Whitlock suddenly noticed that a member of the Zimbalan mission had been watching them . |
49 | The shikar lobby was strong and well organized and naturally argued that the tiger population was holding its own . |
50 | Those cases only decided that the successor must live with the tenant in the whole of the premises . |
51 | But in the end the argument apparently prevailed that the punishment had not breached the minimum threshold of severity to constitute a violation of human rights . |
52 | He stated that he had later spoken to two observers who had been close to the ridge at the time of the accident , and they had apparently noticed that the wind had , momentarily , markedly increased in strength and had appeared to swirl up the hill towards the ridge , coincidental with the time that they saw the aircraft 's wing drop and the aircraft begin to descend . |
53 | The Catholic Christian has perhaps decided that the protestant sees the sacrament merely as a memorial service , witnessing to an event in the past . |
54 | Although the political establishment apparently accepted that the family was entitled to some role during the minority , its closeness to the young king gave rise to anxiety about how that role would develop . |
55 | Although the political establishment apparently accepted that the family was entitled to some role during the minority , its closeness to the young king gave rise to anxiety about how that role would develop . |
56 | For although it is constantly argued that the police represent and are drawn from the community they serve , the cultural style required in the body of the police officer inevitably sets him slightly apart from the ‘ civvies ’ outside the institution , especially where such symbolic use of clothing and beards or hair is the province of the youthful innovator . |
57 | My Lords , I have long thought that the time had come to change the self-imposed judicial rule that forbade any reference to the legislative history of an enactment as an aid to its interpretation . |
58 | A light came on whenever a subject paused for longer than 600 milliseconds , although subjects were merely told that the light indicated when their story-telling was poor . |
59 | When I was considering the applications from Foresterhill and others , I made it clear that I would not approve an application unless I was personally persuaded that the criteria would be met . |
60 | In fact many women said it was kinder to cry than to be angry because , they claimed , if they said what they were really thinking their husbands would be so incredulous and so humiliated that the marriage would not survive . |