Example sentences of "[noun sg] that [art] [det] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There is no doubt in my mind that the many years spent wrestling indifferent cars around the track , trying to make up for what Lauda calls the ‘ evil ’ that dwells in all of them , must take its toll .
2 Having recently announced a new health warnings to be placed on packets in fulfilment of the EC Labelling Directive , the Secretary of State for Health , William Waldegrave , has now reportedly agreed with the tobacco industry that the same warnings will also be used on advertising .
3 This is the finding that the same kinds of factors responsible for increasing lexical accessibility of single words ( mainly in studies of word recognition , but also in some studies of production ) are also responsible for affecting word order in sentences .
4 The truth of the adage that the All Blacks might be vulnerable ‘ going back ’ seemed to be borne out when Vinnie Cunningham 's neat chip over the line and the New Zealand defence looking anything but efficient .
5 The media were later to make much of the discovery that a few weeks after Dennis Parsons 's death , Karen and I had spent a weekend at the same hotel in mid-Wales .
6 ‘ I am 25th in the rankings but it is so tight at the top that a few points will make a big difference .
7 There is evidence that the latter increases in importance as people get older ( Jerrome , 1981 ) .
8 There is evidence that the same trends have begun to permeate the private sector .
9 There was n't the slightest sign that a few hours earlier she had collapsed in paroxysms of tears and seriously considered calling the whole thing off .
10 The country was in the middle of a world recession with unemployment well above two million and looking set to break the three million mark , a prospect that a few years before would have seemed unthinkable .
11 Then came the uncomfortable news that the All Blacks ' opposition in Treviso would involve some South African players .
12 Miss Clinton had taken it away with the wheel still loose and would soon be driving northward over a narrow moorland road that a few miles beyond the road-bridge over the river wound along the shelf of a mountain with a sheer , dizzy drop on one side .
13 He claimed later that he had done so for the reason that a few months earlier he had sold a stallion to Dunlop which had died within a few weeks and that his motive had been to recompense Dunlop for his loss .
14 They do not — for the simple reason that no such things were ever asserted about Cortés during his lifetime .
15 I merely wish to draw attention to the long chain of wrongly dated groups of pottery , each in turn dependent on the other , all the result of the false assumption that a few coins were contemporary with this deposit , whereas they were either residual or still in circulation , and in neither case have a relevance in establishing a terminus post quem .
16 And even if based on the assumption that no more returns can be included In analysis , the response rate is over 50 per cent of the total number of questionnaires sent out .
17 Do the figures on the impact of increasing the number of adults in classrooms challenge the conventional assumption that the more adults there are , the better ?
18 Answer guide : The answer should show an understanding that the both sides of the balance sheet equation must always be equal .
19 DESPITE the Ministry of Defence 's ( MoD ) statement that no more check-flights would be undertaken on Vulcan B.2 XH558 — enabling the flightcrew to stay current should the decision to ground her be reversed , or she be flown to her next owner ( FP November , p26 ) — the mighty Vulcan flew again from Waddington , Lincs , in October and was due to fly again as this issue went on sale .
20 It is a paradox that the more Ministers learn about the complex and uncertain causes and circumstances of crime , the less dogmatic they become in their opinions at the very moment when , as Whitelaw found to his cost , they are most vulnerable to censure by their own supporters .
21 There will be a performance of Prokofiev 's ‘ Peter and the Wolf ’ , with lots of audience participation , including magic , and there is even a rumour that a few trolls might make an appearance .
22 Any current textbook of human genetics will contain the assertion that the most differences of the human mind and soul ( to use an old-fashioned word ) are inherited .
23 All the reindeer are popular , but there 's no doubt that the most cuddles are reserved for the baby of the herd called Kiwi .
24 It was the view of the assessment panel that a few months of reasonably stable attendance could be of great help to Jim when he left school and they decided that a flexible arrangement might encourage attendance where previous efforts had failed .
25 A second problem which besets the researcher investigating the effects of unilateral cerebral lesions is the possibility that the same functions may be organised in different ways in left and right hemispheres ( Semmes , 1968 ) .
26 The press-book heralded Black Legion as the ‘ Truest To Life Film Ever Made ’ and if this claim was meant to refer to the actual Detroit trial it was to the settings of the film that the most audiences would have applied it .
27 And you get the idea that a few qualifications are n't going to make that much of a difference to your life .
28 They are also fond of pushing the idea that the more pockets there are , the more covetable the garment .
29 New Zealand rugby and the All Blacks were not quite protected by the armour-plating they wore in the two years after the 1987 World Cup triumph , but the Irish would pay testimony to the fact that the All Blacks had become a very hard bunch of men by the end of their tour .
30 In so far as it was possible to control the number of children they had , a significant number of Victorian parents were beginning to do so — if only because of the simple fact that the fewer sons and daughters there were , the more could be done to give each of them a good start in life .
  Next page