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

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1 Dr Gilvear 's study found that most often the breaches in the embankments occurred where they overlaid old channels and were vulnerable to erosion .
2 In addition it was suggested that only about a quarter of the earlier sample of women had used birth control methods other than withdrawal compared with 57 per cent of the latter group .
3 They both were astonished that so far no indication of trouble had come from the town common ; but reckoned that it would not be long now before it did , for a few escapers from the castle had been glimpsed running in that direction .
4 Before moving on to make use of the database , it was necessary to assess whether or not the data itself was valid for the organisation being studied , bearing in mind that so far the exercise had been a systems-thinking one , rather than a study of what was happening in practice .
5 Douglas Scott , the region 's senior corporate advisor , said that so far the council has concentrated on upping the region 's profile in Brussels and honing its statistical case .
6 We can conclude that so far the law 's quest to subject the power conferred on corporate managers to controls to prevent it from being exercised arbitrarily has not been successful .
7 Large volume users , like British Steel and ICI , have complained that so far the market mechanism has not proved effective
8 Erm I think just I 've answered that just probably the way you put it .
9 Is the Prime Minister aware that just over an hour ago I received a letter from British Alcan , which has a factory in my constituency at Falkirk , informing me that 169 of the work force will lose their jobs , not because they are inefficient but because the machinery on which they work is 50 years old ?
10 If you have tried Bolo 's Adventures part 1 and you are thinking that just maybe the author has run out of difficult problems to set for you , well think again .
11 A recent divorce petition cited the fact that just about every wall , fitment and piece of furniture in the home was in a half-dismantled or half-done state and had been for years .
12 ‘ I 'm saying that not even a ten-year-old would fall for the line of crap you just had me feed Kevin . ’
13 The harbour was crowded with boats berthed two and three abreast but the market sheds were empty , sluiced down so that not even a small of fish remained .
14 This is something that not even a Washoe or Lucy , far less a baby calf , begins to approach .
15 Why trim the grass so short that not even a goat could get its incisors into the chlorophyl ?
16 So that not even a sparrow shall fall to the ground unnoticed by Him ’ .
17 The Labour Party recently publicised a series of financial projections for nine of the 10 authorities that not even the prospectuses will contain .
18 The reason you have n't read about it , even in the official UFO journals , is that it has been kept so secret that not even the ufologists know about it .
19 The workload is considered such that not even the appointment of a number of additional limited case judges has made much of a dent in it .
20 On the edge of Sheffield town centre the eye confronts some long walls the colour of a storm , so forbidding that not even the kids have made their mark .
21 On the edge of Sheffield town centre the eye confronts some long walls the colour of a storm , so forbidding that not even the kids have made their mark .
22 Some of these , such as gill and skin flukes , can be medicated , but there are others that not even the world 's greatest pessimist would credit .
23 Despite pleas from both Spanner and the referee I insisted that the match go ahead , pointing out that not only a principle but also three certain points were at stake .
24 Accordingly , Drudy and Drudy ( 1979 ) have advocated the provision of professional and office jobs , and Gilg ( 1976 ) has advocated more jobs in office employment and tourism , as well as jobs in manufacturing , as an alternative to agricultural employment , so that not only the aspirations of the whole ability range of young people may be met ( Drudy , 1975 ) but also to increase the level of female activity rates found in many rural areas ( Moseley and Darby , 1978 ) .
25 John of Salisbury 's comment that not only the towns but also the fortresses of Gaul feared Henry I of England was revealing of the new situation .
26 Note it is important in that case that not only the settlor but the spouse of the settlor was not domiciled in the United Kingdom at the time of the last to die otherwise the property would not be in an excluded property settlement — see s80(1) which refers to the last of the spouse or the settlor to cease to be beneficially entitled to an interest in possession .
27 They say the distributorship situation will be resolved soon , ensuring that not only the basses but the new Wamp bass amps , and of course , the associated spares will be available in the UK .
28 I believe that not only the ASB but accounting jurisdictions all around the world have now introduced an unfudgeable bottom line in p&l accounts ; and one can understand why .
29 Rooms must be allocated and charted on the reservation and room status charts so that not only the clients get the type of accommodation they have requested but also the hotel achieves the maximum occupancy of the rooms .
30 It seemed that not only the president , but the whole country , might have been in some delightful lotus-sleep for the past few years .
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