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

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1 It follows from this that in a recognition test subjects will find it extremely difficult to distinguish one of the early sentences in a passage from similar sentences which mean the same .
2 It will be apparent from this that in the event of LCH 's liquidation the clearing members would rank not as members but as creditors or debtors .
3 True , they have D-marks , though their pay is less than half that in the west , and in principle full rights under the constitution .
4 It was because the moment of decision was approaching that they were up here on the hill of Dumyat , six miles from Thorfinn 's muster-point at Dunblane , and half that from the crag on the Forth beside which , on one side or another , Thorfinn would take his stand against any Northumbrian advance out of Lothian .
5 Indeed , the differences are such that to the student weaned on a study of the United States Constitution , the British Constitution is nearly incomprehensible .
6 He opened the door but the dimness inside was such that for a moment he could see little ; then , as his eyes accommodated , he saw Maurice standing , pressed against the far wall as though he wanted to vanish through it .
7 It is also possible to scale the approaching waves such that at the point of collision , and .
8 It was also pointed out that , for the colinear case , it was convenient to rescale the approaching waves such that at the point of collision .
9 Their influence is such that during the stalking season vast areas of Scotland are closed off to hillwalkers .
10 Her dislike of him was such that during the filming of A Letter to Four Wives , in which she picks up a photograph of a man and reacts with distaste , director Joe Mankiewicz used a photo of Preminger which prompted exactly the right expression from Darnell .
11 Although the practical difficulties of time measurement were such that until the middle of the seventeenth century most clocks had but one hand and the dial was divided only into hours and quarters , the abstract framework of uniformly divided time gradually became the new medium of daily existence .
12 The distribution of the wreckage was such that from the position of the outer wing panels more than two kilometres from the main wreckage it was clear that there had been a structural failure of both wings in the air .
13 The hospital staff have the skills to care for these patients such that after a month or two their behaviour improves and they become suitable for private care .
14 stating that there is a jack C such that in the past , there was an event A of John picking up C.
15 Donlevy ‘ lorded it over everybody else ’ and exasperated Ray Milland so much that during a fencing sequence , Milland aimed for an unpadded spot on Donlevy , managing to draw blood .
16 Why for example is the profit on running a service station whittled away so much that by the time off-site costs are taken into account , the final profit is just one quarter of what it was ?
17 The interesting thing of course was his ro , his brother Robert was a civil engineer and the story goes , of course , they disagreed so much that in the end George said okay Robert you can have the civil engineers , I 'll start with mechanical engineers !
18 It was plain to her that her therapist was meticulous , thoughtful and highly trained — it was undeniable — but Scarlet increasingly found all that beside the point because her malaise had not significantly decreased with treatment , and worrying about the cost of it kept her awake at night .
19 Do n't give me all that about the ban from Europe , it is because of the way the game has gone in England that we are not the force we were in European competition .
20 ‘ I hope he 's not overdoing it , all that after a day 's work , ’ Terry said .
21 Did he really have all that in the kitchen or had she sent out for it ?
22 Scandal at Bedminster parish — but we read all that in the papers
23 Doris will account for all that in the script and he 'll fall into line the second he sees hard print .
24 In fact there are so many that without the use of sophisticated computers it would be impossible to monitor them all .
25 It seemed clear to many that with the defeat of France a glorious peace was imminent .
26 Those that like the Macintosh System love it : those that do n't like it detest the idea of that mass of graphical software between them and their applications , between them and the processor : like the nervous flyer , they hate the feeling that they are not in control , that if something goes wrong , there is absolutely nothing they can do to save themselves .
27 Instead , he came back with such surprising ferocity of his own that by the bell at least one judge thought he 'd done enough to win the round .
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