Example sentences of "[adj] that [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It would be reasonable to expect from this that over a few years , our APR disclosure regulations broadly similar to the US Truth in Lending Law — will raise people 's knowledge of APRs well above the present level , and confirm them in their belief that disclosure of APRs is important .
2 We can see from this that in the technical sense most large and many small organisations can be described as bureaucracies .
3 It is clear that despite the continuing success and positive feedback from the Programme the difficulties of organisation hinder a much better sharing between the Regions .
4 It is clear that during a certain stage in the child 's development , artefacts become its principal means of articulating feelings and desires .
5 It is clear that during the past twenty years developmental psychologists have come to the edge of a vast array of structural processes in the development of the mind , and an exciting era of experimental research has begun .
6 It is clear that over the 1980s , our investment record has run well ahead of that of the rest of the Group of Seven .
7 It is clear that over the past year everyone in has worked extremely hard and for long hours .
8 It is clear that on the Conservative side , before defeat in the 1964 General Election , Edward Boyle was attracted to a binary solution and in March of that year put a paper on it to a Cabinet committee .
9 Is it not clear that at the next general election the public will face a clear choice between lower personal taxes under a Conservative Government or swingeing increased taxes under Labour ?
10 It is clear that to the ancient Egyptian death was not the end that there was thought to be life after death , for which certain provisions and preparations had to be made .
11 Within the hour the camera , the film and the physical chemistry became so clear that with a great sense of excitement I hurried to the place where a friend was staying to describe to him in detail a dry camera which would give a picture immediately after exposure .
12 First of all , I think it would be useful if we were clear that with the new , ministry was a waste !
13 Independently of whether such arguments have any bearing on the duration of sympatry between cuckoos and magpies , it is clear that with the larger sample sizes of our data , many of the trends oppose those claimed by Soler and Möller .
14 The Ecumenical Centre says it is clear that from the very beginning the new regime planned to eliminate the media from the political scene .
15 So far as demand management is concerned , however , it is now clear that from the 1950s to the mid 1960s budgets were substantially in surplus and hence deflationary [ Matthews , 1968 ] .
16 It is quite clear that in the 17th and 18th centuries and , indeed , up to the enactment of the Judicature Act 1873 the courts , and in particular the Court of King 's Bench , consistently declined to exercise any jurisdiction over any matters in which a right of appeal lay from the benchers of an Inn to the judges sitting as a domestic tribunal .
17 It will already be clear that in the contemporary convergence , with its deliberate extension and interlocking of hitherto separate ( if always related ) senses of culture , what is now often called ‘ cultural studies ’ is already a branch of general sociology .
18 For it is clear that in the traditional view a sexually mature woman should be sexually active .
19 If we say , you see , that the function of the dream is to safeguard sleep , and to fulfil wishes , then it 's clear that in the real world not all wishes are fulfillable and it may well be that , that the latent thoughts , in some cases , is so alarming and so disturbing , that they can not be sufficiently disguised and will lead to a state of waking , and that waking proves of course that the dream has failed in its function of safeguarding sleep .
20 It was clear that in the preceding year share prices in global financial markets had risen in such a way as to force yields down several points below gilt yields ( see Fig. 17.7 ) .
21 In so far as the house does represent a large capital asset , and it undoubtedly does , I am quite clear that in the long term , house prices are likely , generally to rise with inflation , indeed I would think must do so or perhaps to rise rather more quickly than inflation if there is a rising population and as there has been for very , very ma many years have passed , that , in the passed a decreasing occupancy rate .
22 It is clear that in the 1990s the demand will exist , particularly when demographic considerations such as changing family size are considered along with those already taken explicitly into account such as age and social class .
23 For comparison , the errors e in the two solutions ( 2 ) and ( 3 ) are ( the lines intersect at t =3 ) unc and it is clear that in the second case the errors increase markedly with t , as required .
24 If one takes everything into account — the shifts in climate which might well remove the United States from its place as the leading ‘ food power ’ and affect the Soviet Union as well , the limited prospects for increased yields , desertification and the steady increase in the global population — it is clear that in the next century large sections of the world 's population will have a very narrow margin between them and starvation .
25 It is also clear that in the last two weeks the whole country , as it heard different voices and different noises , has wondered who is speaking for the Labour party .
26 It seems clear that throughout the developmental period , certain factors can be identified which in certain circumstances will increase a person 's future psychiatric risk .
27 It is clear that throughout the second half of 1184 Henry Ii had been seeking a solution to the problem of the succession .
28 It is clear that after the prolonged and intensive use by Edward IV , Henry VII , and Henry VIII of such officers as the Treasurer of the Chamber and the Keeper of the Jewel House , the Chamber offices ceased from about 1540 to play a major part in national administration , although the holders of the major offices — the Chamberlain , the Treasurer of the Household , the Controller , and the Vice-Chamberlain — were usually influential political figures .
29 It became manifest that within the ruling Party majority there was a fraction crystallising which was in favour of very high rates of industrial investment ; this was associated with Stalin .
30 Although it is doubtful that throughout the middle ages masters and servants ate at the same table , above and below the salt , as the Victorians supposed , the Gothic hall , entered directly from the outside world and accommodating every social rank , symbolized their ideal of social integration .
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