Example sentences of "[prep] [noun sg] that these [noun] " in BNC.

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1 No-one in their right minds would have believed that Labour wanted to abolish heterosexuality or promote AIDS , but such was the level of fear and ignorance about homosexuality that these ideas could be aired .
2 Many people swear that their horse has a sense of humour , especially when it likes tipping them off ; but it is possible of course that these people actually have a considerable sense of humour themselves to put up with the vagaries of their horse !
3 In order to limit the degree of confusion that these factors may cause , the names of the traditional weaving areas ( Persia , Anatolia , the Caucasus , Afghanistan , Turkestan etc. ) have been used when discussing the weaving , history or design influences of their rugs , and the names of the modern states have been used when referring to purely commercial factors , such as import tariffs , government actions and subsidies .
4 Her association with birds and animals is linked with her ability to use natural drives and the type of primitive but effective forms of perception that these creatures possess .
5 Rod-bending bites , although more common when barbel fishing than any other kind , are not the only sort of bite that these fish give .
6 For it is the kind of work that these individuals carried on with the knowledge that they were seeking to improve life on earth , that set the example for the vast mass of the human race to follow and thereby perpetuate , albeit largely unknowingly , the strengthening and augmentation of the Created God .
7 Cicely Hepwood crooned , and Leith had an unwanted moment of self-disgust that these people were all so happy for Naylor , when everything was just so much sham .
8 So it 's a pleasure really , I think it 's true , I think there are very many people who undermine and er undervalue the contribution made by people who have been in politics for a long time and I think what they also forget is the level of commitment that these people have put in over many many years .
9 Besides just the impact environmentally of the road , and besides the traffic flows you could get , the generation of traffic that these roads in fact will bring with them development .
10 I find it difficult to understand how they are going to carry on experimental work at other depots that are n't really equipped to carry out experimental work , and so for that reason , I mean , there 's a great deal of concern that these cuts are n't rather more cosmetic that they 've been made out to be .
11 Here then we have in a nutshell the substance of the whole primatial claim succinctly summarized ; and when we find similar phrases in the documents of Popes Boniface V , Honorius I , Sergius I , and Gregory III , which came to light in 1120 , we can say with a very high degree of probability that these sentences contain the main substance of the additions made to the documents in which they appear .
12 This study included EEG/EOG recordings during sleep , and it is interesting to compare the sort of sleep that these subjects were getting after months of sleep reduction with subjects who have reduced sleep for briefer periods of time .
13 Matter falling into such a supermassive black hole would provide the only source of power great enough to explain the enormous amounts of energy that these objects are emitting .
14 Notes were scrutinised for evidence that these criteria had been fulfilled .
15 As he reached his door he found his thoughts turning once more to the urgent problem of putting food in his belly , and a part of his mind registered with pleasure that these thoughts were at last supplanting the ones in which he alternately pined for Aset and visited unholy vengeance upon her .
16 Russo ends her ( 1982 ) review of US psychology of women faculties and courses with pride that these courses are being taught mainly by and for women .
17 On the subject or responses mediated by the Th2 subset of CD4+ cells , the story of the eosinophil grows more intriguing with news that these cells are a major source of interleukin-5 and possess IgA receptors ( M. Capron , Pasteur-Lille ) .
18 The Court was concerned to learn from counsel that these matters were not always adhered to in some courts .
19 Bearing in mind that these remarks were made before the new section 69(1) was introduced by the Act of 1986 , I do not see that they can be regarded as carrying the matter any further .
20 It is important to bear in mind that these statistics are collected on a changing basis , even though all derive from taxes at death ; they cover both consumption and production property .
21 Although many of the group would still be under 25 in the years 191418 , there are only 16 brides under 25 during the period , whereas in 1911–12 alone there were 15 brides under 25.22 ( One must of course bear in mind that these figures represent only the retrievable fragments of the marriage pattern for the whole sample . )
22 It should be borne in mind that these ratios are based on financial statements which only report on those ‘ facts ’ that can be expressed in money terms .
23 It should be borne in mind that these ratios are based on financial statements which only report on those ‘ facts ’ that can be expressed in money terms .
24 But as was stated above , it must always be borne in mind that these models are ideal types .
25 Lighting should be dim to moderate , bearing in mind that these fish live in shady areas and in coloured water .
26 Instead of manufacturer 's servicing it 's just an oil change and level check , that 's all it is , every three months , three thousand miles , because bearing in mind that these vehicles will be over five years and sixty thousand miles it 's less onerous to the customer to have that than to be forced into having a manufacturer service which they probably ca n't afford .
27 This is certainly significant at the 1 per cent level , though we must bear in mind that these expectations are calculated on the basis of a purely random distribution of sites , which may not be quite true in practice .
28 Bearing in mind that these clients were ‘ at risk of residential care ’ , most received only one or at the most two services , and then only for certain days in the week ( p. 299 ) .
29 It can be said in conclusion that these developments have become central to the future of the ‘ GIS revolution ’ of the late 1980s , since it is now clear that the massive ( and desirable ) growth of the use of GIS can not be supported without improvements to the use environment experienced by the user .
30 Moreover his approach is simplistic , treating each book as a vehicle for potential issues regardless of variations in type , level and style , and the differences in demand that these features suggest .
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