Example sentences of "[adv] that [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | As of Oct. 31 Zhelev had not invited anyone to form a new government so that under the terms of the Constitution the Dimitrov government remained in office in a caretaker capacity . |
2 | So that for the structuralists literature becomes ‘ a kind of extension and application of certain properties of language ’ ( Todorov 1977 : 19 ) . |
3 | So that behind the changes of direction , wrote Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) , this has always been a constant , the feeling of disgust in the pit of the stomach . |
4 | He accepted that the function of the court was to construe the actual words enacted by Parliament so that in no circumstances could the court attach to words a meaning that they were incapable of bearing . |
5 | One of Drummond 's concerns was to make interval talks of concert and opera broadcasts relate to the programme itself , so that in the intervals of Carmen you might hear somebody talking about Carmen . |
6 | The cash would be channelled from the government to the universities via a commercial company so that in the words of the report , ‘ industrial commitment and market considerations are guaranteed ’ . |
7 | Whether by telephone or face-to-face , personal selling is an art , and a good selling technique can be developed so that with quiet confidence , knowledge and enthusiasm for the product the receptionist can highlight the special features of the establishment , so that in the minds of the customer that particular establishment has something extra special to offer . |
8 | Now what it is actually is a idea that part of our research and development actually engages the customer so that in the stores it 's very difficult to experiment in say half a dozen when the national press is out there every week making an offer that you do n't carry by definition like that |
9 | It is right that in the negotiations , which must remain confidential , they should seek to prevent us from going too far too soon . |
10 | It is not that on the borders of logic there is a loose form called argument from analogy , but that all thinking starts from a spontaneous discrimination of the like and the unlike , and tendency to group the similar in categories and expect similar consequences from similar conditions . |
11 | I think it right to say at once that on the authorities , consisting of a series of previous decisions of the Divisional Court in which the provisions now contained in section 7(3) and ( 4 ) and section 8(2) of the Act of 1988 have been considered , neither the magistrate nor the Divisional Court in this case had any option but to decide as they did . |
12 | I note also that of the judges who expressed opinions to the House of Lords Select Committee on Murder and Life Imprisonment about this issue , a majority favoured immediate disclosure of the judges ' recommendation as to the tariff . |
13 | ‘ I told Pa frankly that under the circumstances I attached more value to Michelet 's advice than to his own … . |
14 | He pointed out that under the proposals an extra 42 places would be reserved for the disabled in Abbot 's Yard , near High Row and Skinnergate . |
15 | It turns out that despite the accolades of later historians , Davy had formidable competition for the creation of a lamp . |
16 | Fforde highlights a key difficulty for his argument by pointing out that in the debates about the issue which dominated Edwardian Conservatism — tariff reform — the Conservative Party developed a language which ‘ employed a great deal of anti- laissez faire rhetoric and espoused policies which involved state expansion ’ . |
17 | It turns out that like the vervets , birds will also learn to whom they should respond . |
18 | As an example of this interconnection Althusser points out that among the relations of production of capitalist societies are the buying and selling of labour power by capitalists and workers . |
19 | you see Lord is here very splendidly to argue the case and at the moment I 'd like you to address the question , I 'll ask it again , the question is , I think it 's a simple one , it follows from your answer about why the brochures had to be updated , but when there was a time when they were not updated before nineteen eighty nine , there was a risk was n't there that with the brochures printing service charges towards the end of the sales period someone might have been mislead by the brochure ? that 's right is n't it ? |
20 | They debated unhappily , reluctant to commit themselves to an opinion , until John Prophet suggested sadly that in the circumstances it might be well to consult the archbishop of Canterbury , and in some relief they agreed on this course , and carried their problem that same afternoon to Lambeth ; where Thomas Arundel , on the force of whose word and influence they could rely , advised them , in consideration of the desperate need , to issue the required letters patent , and he would be responsible for defending their action to the king , should it need any defence . |
21 | And secondly that in the interests of ‘ racial harmony ’ the government would itself discriminate against black people and make this discrimination legal . |
22 | Both Soviet and hostile critics observed subsequently that in the eyes of the people Living Church members often looked like Soviet agents and opportunists . |