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

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1 An unmarried partner may agree with the surviving relatives that provision will be made for him or her from the estate , but this is not always possible .
2 Recognition has solved the constitutional issue of Slovenia ( although not the economic problems that independence has either created or failed to solve ) .
3 I do expect occasionally to have temper , because it is only when we are discussing the right subjects that temper will arise : if people lose their tempers it is because they are emotionally involved in the problem , and we are probably talking on a subject which needs to be aired .
4 After each separate exercise allow a minute or so for fuller relaxation to take place and for you to concentrate on the pleasant sensations that relaxation brings .
5 Although there is some truth in this relative deprivation argument , it is equally important to note that the pains of imprisonment are mitigated by pleasant recollections : to be doing ‘ a lot of bird ’ without having lived well seems far more futile and absurd that to be paying for the rich fruits that crime has already brought .
6 They must be allowed to benefit fully from the rich experiences that museum and site visits can offer .
7 I am confident that Government policies provide , and will continue to provide , an appropriate basis for meeting the high expectations that society has for the future .
8 Edward 's first year at Oxford , with its long hours of set daily lectures and prepared reading , its loneliness punctuated by long walks , longer letters , and occasional forays in search of new friendships , formed a gentle transition from the two years of freedom he had enjoyed , since leaving St. Paul 's , towards the severer demands that family and social demands were to make upon him .
9 Nakane 's work has a more voluntaristic approach , but even she writes about the assertive techniques that management uses to build up company identification of workers .
10 On routes where natural protection is absent or is inadequate for the repeated falls that sport routes necessitate .
11 The membrane does n't use toxins like the lytic toxins that staphylococcusorius expressed er they 're often detected by their immunelytic properties , see the in the er , in the bacterial passage .
12 We look at the Caira spider , which has no web , but simply mimics the smell of the female moth and waits to devour the male moths that land on him .
13 Given the apparent turbulence of much of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries , with religious Reformations , agricultural riots and the Civil Wars that stability and prosperity may seem elusive to the historian but they were very apparent to many contemporaries , at least among the higher ranks .
14 Because of the limited techniques that judo offered , some police forces eventually opted for aikido .
15 Ending the scandal of ‘ consultancies and all that ’ the outside interests that colour , if not compromise , the activities of too many MPs should , but wo n't be , a General Election issue .
16 I shall also briefly refer to the reformed roles that ideology/ knowledge have to play in Habermas 's account of advanced capitalism .
17 Plainly , the figures are impressive but they fall far short of the early hopes that computing might have a pervasive influence on school education .
18 Why are the Government so sensitive to our explanation of the creeping privatisation in the health service , when the tenor of his statement is of the tremendous benefits that privatisation is supposed to bring ?
19 Fund-holding practices are gaining ground in popularity , and patients are certainly enjoying the extra benefits that flow from the GPs ' scheme .
20 The counsellor has to be realistic in balancing the potential value of change against the personal costs that change might incur .
21 Furthermore , this focus on child support does nothing to compensate women for the real inequalities that marriage and child-rearing brings .
22 What are the three pillars that support trade unionism in Britain ?
23 If there are indeed older American values of the Truman and Eisenhower era , the people who hold them are suspicious of posturing blowhards , influencing public policy without being forced to take the hard choices that government requires .
24 Despite all this , Fanon deploys some of the worst prejudices that psychoanalysis has been used to reinforce : ‘ All the Negrophobic women I have known had abnormal sex lives …
25 Most biological systems have feedback mechanisms that help smooth out the little fluctuations that life throws at them .
26 It 's easy to see how important the Occupation Road used to be , because every so often the little becks that rundown from the fell to cross the track are culverted underneath the lane through well-made stone-lined tunnels .
27 Our minds ca n't cope with the large distances that astronomy deals in or with the small distances that atomic physics deals in , but we can represent those distances in mathematical symbols .
28 I just wanted to bring up some of the underlying reasons for depression , and one of the large things that society is having to address just now is child sexual abuse
29 As we saw above , and Lyons would not disagree , it is mostly in the paralinguistic features that English performs this function .
30 All things considered , then , the left claims that pluralism tends to provide a top-down view of British politics .
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