Example sentences of "[adv] that [pron] [verb] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 The child glared at me so fiercely that I tried to ingratiate myself by asking who was her favourite composer .
2 He realised suddenly that he had to go to the bathroom .
3 Leaving the clinic she realised suddenly that she wanted to go to her garden .
4 The producers liked the idea so much that they decided to make a two part series full of dancing , celebrations , cookery and food .
5 There is still much that we need to know about HIV and AIDS , and we are all learning all of the time .
6 It turned out to be a cutting from the Guardian , and contained much that she wanted to know .
7 We have the greatest chance ever to rid the world of nuclear weapons now , yet the consensus in this country is apparently that we need to maintain three Trident systems and possibly build a fourth at a total cost of more than £23 billion .
8 Life has many other prizes to offer if you are clear enough that you want to claim them .
9 Do n't we pay you enough that you have to go into the courier business ? ’
10 It 's enough that you have to pay for the licence , which is erm , what is it eighty pounds
11 ‘ Christ , is n't it bad enough that I have to scrape for every bloody penny to do a piece of vital research , without being forced to turn my project into a circus for a lot of gawping idiots who wo n't have the least comprehension of what I 'm trying to do ?
12 It was enough that she had to work with him .
13 Had n't she always concentrated all her energies on having a good time , even though she knew deep down that she wanted to do more with her life ?
14 Firstly , nobody , but nobody would want to levy charges until it was a last resort , but if the alternative to levying those charges were perhaps that we had to cut the staffing levels in those adult training centres , then you get a different answer to the question , and I had a meeting about four weeks ago with the heads of some of our centres who 've been asking parents and carers that question .
15 His successor , Alexander I , was known as ‘ the Fierce ’ , and there were legends of his suppressing an uprising by rebels from Moray so brutally that nobody survived to explain the reasons for their disaffection .
16 The third one up here , the small one , is a little bit sort of lost because it 's against er , this sort of cavity light here so that one tends to get a little bit lost .
17 Max made us nail everything so that nobody had to put reverb on anything to cover up a mistake .
18 This was well below our own dead slow speed so that we had to keep stopping , or steam in wide circles to hold our position astern .
19 God introduces us to our true selves , so that we come to recognize ourselves , and our God for the first time .
20 So teach us Lord , in the coming year , to turn our helplessness into prayer , so that we learn to react to the news by seeking your throne .
21 In our personal encounter with Christ , we begin to distinguish how we have naturally tried to please him , instead of allowing his love to enter our hearts so that we begin to love him with his gift of love to us .
22 But the next best thing is for more money towards fourteen to nineteen education so that 's very welcome at least and was widely supported in the various versions we saw this morning , my concern is with the way in which this money is to got from the centre to the school and I 'd like to speak very strongly in favour of what if I got what you 're is education so that we aim to assist schools to build on their own interests and and not have it parcelled out by some central authority which is and which a sigh of this is an area of great relevance to schools
23 But in the 1950s the first wave of modern consumerism transformed people 's lifestyles so that they came to expect it to be right and natural that they should have consumer durables ( and increasingly non-durable goods ) .
24 ‘ Many teachers are now suffering from or showing signs of stress-related illnesses so that they wish to take early retirement , some on the grounds of ill-health , or are eager to leave the profession altogether , ’ the Belfast secondary teacher added .
25 So that they began to hint that I could n't be so very friendly if I was afraid to take them round to meet him .
26 As the tide rose , the wind shredded the clouds above them and pushed a mighty swell across the water , so that they began to roll as they had once rolled at sea .
27 These stations are run by boards appointed by the state governments so that they tend to act as mouthpieces of the respective state governments .
28 Inevitably this affects their attitude to these people so that they tend to assume that all their visits are time-wasting .
29 Middy snuggled up closer to him , his shadow a small lump on Lowell 's shadow on the ancient walls , so that they seemed to merge like a grotesque pregnancy .
30 Corridors that sloped down more and more steeply , so that they had to sit and shuffle down the last few metres .
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