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

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1 If the commercial benefits to Visa of retaining the data do not outweigh the costs of their retention then there can be little hope that such data will be accessible to historians in the future .
2 There is some fear that such resistance might pass into weed populations so making both them and " volunteer " crop plants more difficult to eradicate .
3 There is some concern that such schemes could be killed off by privatisation .
4 There was undoubtedly seen to be a growing problem regarding adolescent girls because they were maturing a little earlier and marrying later , around 25 , and it was in this context that such horrors as clitoridectomies could be developed .
5 The issue of " criminous clerks " began to be discussed during the early twelfth century , and by the 1150s in England , there was some acceptance that such men could be tried only by an ecclesiastical tribunal .
6 On the other hand , there are many cases in which prerogative orders have been awarded against Ministers without any qualm or discussion of the matter ; but it does not follow from this fact that such orders operate as anything other than ‘ requests ’ to act or to refrain from action .
7 We can not , of course , be confident at this stage that such differences as were found are the product of any one variety of team organization .
8 We very much hope that such reforms will underpin the peace process .
9 However , as we have seen , there is little evidence that such poverty did decline in this period ; indeed the survival of more mouths to fed may have increased it .
10 Is there any evidence that such limits have been recognised in the last 12 years ?
11 If they are re-elected , is there any chance that such proposals will be carried out this time ?
12 Helmut Kohl , the German Chancellor , said later the same day that such criticisms of Germany were " inappropriate for a minister " .
13 Propositions like " Men exist ( or actually exist ) " , it is claimed , look odd and mysterious , and their quantified " canonical " paraphrases , while admittedly helping to remove any suggestion that such propositions might have a subject/predicate structure , do not quite succeed in alleviating the mystery .
14 But there can be little doubt that such change is not going to happen overnight .
15 There seems little doubt that such variation is the rule rather than the exception : the meaning of any word form is in some sense different in every distinct context in which it occurs .
16 There seems little doubt that such feeling existed , especially in the 1340s and 1350s .
17 There can be little doubt that such examples represent the tip of an iceberg .
18 There can be little doubt that such sentiments reinforced the laws or dooms that were proclaimed by early kings in England and reminded the king of his Christian obligations and duties .
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