Example sentences of "[verb] [to-vb] the [noun] that " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It would be wrong to anticipate the conclusions of the inquiry but I do want to assure the public that this matter is a cause of great concern to the Prison Service and that all aspects of the escape , including the role played by prison staff , will be very carefully examined . ’
2 No point making a fuss ; plenty more women with young kinds anxious for work , as Mr Silver will explain to silence the muttering that occasionally drowns even the machines .
3 They resorted to terror and adventurism , for which there was no justification now that a powerful Social Democratic movement had taken shape , and they failed to acknowledge the leadership that must be exercised by the proletariat over the peasantry and the democratic movement as a whole .
4 He again failed to acknowledge the part that he could play in reducing the odds which are stacked against women and shackle them in the way that he described .
5 But I intend to drive the strategy that is already in place and leave my successor to drive it even further . ’
6 Alternatively , however , you may want to emphasise the point that actual readers are unlikely to respond all in the same way , especially readers differing in gender , class , age , ethnicity or some other aspect of social identity .
7 The Government are helping to support the idea that coal is a pollutant but that nuclear power is green friendly and that gas is green friendly .
8 Criticisms of the view of auditory deprivation ( Bench , 1979 ) and of bilingualism ( Arnold , 1982 ) tend to miss the point that language acquisition occurs through interaction .
9 Finally , all these remarks tend to confirm the view that the infinitive is the most virtual form in the system of the verb ( cf.
10 So they will continue to arise , but I think that it is right to plan to accommodate the ones that you know about .
11 ‘ It amazes me he should now want to kill the goose that has laid him the golden egg .
12 I will not go further than to say ’ around 40 ’ , but we certainly intend to implement the programme that we set out in ’ Options for Change ’ .
13 Social historians tend to support the view that industrialisation destroyed the apprenticeship system .
14 In the end there was long and controversial litigation , which nevertheless failed to establish the rights that Kagan sought .
15 A different possible interpretation of a contract is that , not the buyer , but the seller has undertaken to accept the risk that the goods might not exist , i.e. he has undertaken as part of the contract that the goods do in fact exist .
16 The acquirer may not have the time or be willing to make the inspections and will not want to accept the risk that some information may have been given to one of its employees or advisers who was unable at the time to appreciate its significance in relation to the transaction , or indeed may have been forgotten .
17 Executives tend to monopolize the information that assemblies need to do their job .
18 If ADAS wishes to continue to provide the service that it has done for many years to our industry , and as an ADAS spokesman said ‘ not to price itself out of the market ’ , then it needs to join the real world .
19 Whether this is acceptable to the vendor is a matter of commercial negotiation and depends on who agrees to bear the risk that a consent is refused or not forthcoming within a specified period .
20 It is not intended to provide the detail that is rightly expected by the local communities who live and work in close proximity to our operations , and which we provide through locally published reports .
21 The children could not keep away from the railway , and they soon got to know the trains that passed by .
22 Many writs are already framed and well recognized to meet the cases that usually arise ; you can have them for the asking , if you pay the fee .
23 Foucault adopts a strategy , obviously indebted to Bachelard , designed to restore the otherness that History by definition must disallow : he produces an account of epistemic shifts , with prior epistemes presented as altogether estranged from the present .
24 As symbols of dominance , these displays demanded a spectacular setting , and soon every great city of the industrialized world possessed a museum whose cathedral-like setting helped to confirm the role that science had usurped as the source of moral authority in the modern world .
25 She tried to banish the thought that Zambia attracted trouble like a magnet , knowing it to be bad magick even to think that , but it was difficult not to .
26 Like many others during his age , Spenser developed a variety of tactics to try to fudge the fact that England was ruled by a woman .
27 Now I I I do n't think there 's any doubt about this Chairman that that particular group bears er comment from us er er part of the er Conservative resolutions made wants to acknowledge the fact that for the first time all parties , members of the parties have n't started to look in detail at these St Albans and many aspect , many aspects of the Consultants ' strategy of starting to appeal .
28 ‘ Do you need to see the proof that ‘ t is over before you 'll stop lying to me ? ’ he cut her off to demand .
29 We want to find the probability that the sum-vector should lie in the region is the probability density or probability per unit volume and we understand by dR the volume element dX dY dZ .
30 Milk , after the baby is born the first time the baby actually has to digest its own food it has to process the food that it takes in , what 's in milk ?
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