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

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1 The fact that in every instance she was chaperoned , at least by a detective and usually by a group of other friends too , never seemed relevant .
2 Since I accept his primary submission I do not find it necessary to consider his other options , but I observe that in every case they would involve the court in a far more creative exercise in framing the law , which I doubt we would be entitled to undertake , than by holding as I would do that a corporate public authority has no right to sue for the tort of defamation and is to be left , if necessary , to such other rights as it may have , in particular the right to sue for malicious falsehood .
3 They realize that in every case he has answered people 's questions according to their particular logic .
4 I do not suppose that in every case it would be worth the trouble that would be caused to the taxing authorities if they were to inquire into every deposit account and find if the interest had been increased , unless it had been increased by a large amount .
5 But I do remember that in every room he showed me I made sure I was near to the door , the safest point of exit if he tried anything .
6 Shakespeare 's plays are so rich that in every age they can produce fresh meanings and even those who deny his universality agree on his cultural importance .
7 Shakespeare 's plays are so rich that in every age they can produce fresh meanings and even those who deny his universality agree on his cultural importance .
8 Edward Cody of the AP and I once came to the conclusion that in every interview we conducted in Lebanon , a special chair should be set aside for The Plot — since The Plot invariably played a leading role in all discussions we ever had with politicians , diplomats or gunmen .
9 ‘ You ca n't say it 's a coincidence that in every interview you see with these women the journalist always picks that five minutes where they 're going on about abuse or victimisation .
10 Just as Wunis Abdulhadi was able to opt out among friends , but knew that in a conflict he could not walk down the street without danger of attack from Zuwaya , so ‘ the obligation to fight ’ arose from people 's perception that their opponents would assume the worst possible case — — that everyone who had a theoretical obligation to fight would do so .
11 Oh , I 'll empty that in a minute I must admit I do n't fancy trying to do it , it 's going to be really cold and horrible .
12 The American conductor John Canarina also pointed out that in a performance he attended at Tanglewood in 1965 and in a recording he made with the Chicago Symphony , Munch made two cuts between figs. 110 and 128 ( in the Durand score ) .
13 Many have been taught that in a relationship they have no right to make demands on a partner ; to say clearly what they want may lose his affection .
14 Yet investors were so shocked that in a day they knocked $13.4 billion off the value of the company .
15 The doctors told me they had high hopes that in a year you 'd have made a full recovery .
16 And I suppose you could say that in a way it it worked .
17 Charity agreed coolly that in a way she supposed it was .
18 Strange that in a way he would like to be her friend even more than her lover .
19 So that in a sense we have all been clipping , fleaing , and paring .
20 Tolkien , of course , being a Christian , did in absolute fact believe that in the end all things would end happily , that in a sense they already had — a belief he shared with Dante , and a matter of faith beyond argument .
21 I feel so close to God , so inspired by His Spirit that in a sense I am God .
22 The bright solar surface is made up of gas at reasonably high pressure , so that in a spectroscope it yields a rainbow .
23 Jessop argues that this is highly unlikely and that in a crisis we can not say in advance whether the state — now divorced from any one-to-one relationship with the ruling class — will assist capital , labour or ( as seems to be the perennial case in Britain ) pursue policies to the mutual ruin of the contending classes .
24 You may think that in a democracy you too can flick idly through ice-screws and ropes , but the moment you prod anything with an inquisitive finger , an assistant will leap on you with a quiz as to your standard of rock-climbing .
25 It seemed that in no time she was forced indoors by huge raindrops that appeared to have come from nowhere .
26 Economists point out , however , that in the UK it has shrunk so much — from 30% in 1970 to 21% today — that critical mass has been lost .
27 It seems useful , therefore , to emphasize this difference by referring to the practice as budgetary accounting , while remembering that in the UK it does not have the same implications as in the USA .
28 What was worse for Scotland was the knowledge that in the test they would also be facing Eales and McCall at the line-out plus Lynagh , Horan and Campese in the backs .
29 you perhaps have n't got the same degree of landlord exploitation , you might , I think one might argue from , from what we said earlier that in the north you 've got a s a slightly more paternalistic landlord , it 's , it , there 's less , less absentee landlordism landlords were more likely to have been behaving within the confines of moral economy would n't , would n't have been tt erm reducing rents , it was done on a much more , more personal sort of scale .
30 And he said that in the daytime you had landmarks to go by .
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