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

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1 Yes , Elizabeth Howell of Exploring Parenthood , certainly that is the case , both with parents and with people like teachers or child care workers , who are in locus parentis for many hours of the day , and our sense is very much that if the adults around children can feel supported and confident that they can acknowledge their own fears and anxieties that they will then be better be able to transmit that measured response to the children in their care and it was very interesting last week , I heard from an educational psychologist in the north of England who said that a group of teachers had asked from several schools to come together to think about the resources that they needed to set in place in order to deal with the children 's behaviour , and after the meeting , at which they were able to express their anxieties , they then returned to their various areas and when the psychologist contacted them a couple of days later they said we felt sufficiently supported by knowing that others are struggling with the same issues and that we could acknowledge our concerns about it , that we now feel able to get on with the job of helping the children , and I think that was a very good example of adults finding a way to acknowledge their own anxieties and thereby to increase their effectiveness in dealing with the children that in whose care they have .
2 Ruth Lowinsky 's book is a true period piece , which is to say that in its time it was bang up to date .
3 The communiqué declared that in their discussion they noted the " total independence " of each fraternal party and state , and also the " danger of borrowing someone else 's experience without taking into account national peculiarities " .
4 Many people can , can remember it that in their youth they saw their when they 're their early childhood they saw their parents were very special people the parents .
5 He thought her pleasure in Florian 's win was for her once and future lover and , presumably , that in her euphoria she was going to let him jump this queue of men he had convinced himself she had waiting for her sexual favours .
6 She felt as though someone had dumped an enormous casket of jewels in her lap , and pleasurable though that was , she knew that in her heart she would much rather have her great-aunt alive , and the casket of treasure at some much later time in her own life .
7 Novella no longer needs to feel gratitude that in her case she has a father who has allowed her to teach in his place ; she has parted the curtain and is speaking for herself — in as many tongues as she pleases .
8 SYLVIA MURRAY PHONED TO SAY THAT IN HER LETTER SHE HAS PUT MARCH 17 , AS BEING THE DATE OF THE NEXT RAUCS MEETING , WHEN IN FACT IT SHOULD READ WEDNESDAY 18 MARCH .
9 Kylie has managed to maintain her sense of humour because she more than anyone understands that in her business it is better to be written about than to be ignored .
10 She would likely never see her sister again , so that in her mind she would always be as she had been on that last walk over the moor to Barnswick .
11 She said that in her opinion it would be desirable if Alice came in , as soon as possible .
12 Dottie 's feelings were seldom bruised by honesty — I simply said I 'd rather not and she said that in her opinion I was crazy , and that was that .
13 But for John Knox , ‘ so she was sold to go to France , to the end that in her youth she should drink of that liquor ( the Catholic faith ) that should remain with her all her lifetime , for a plague to this realm and for her final destruction ’ .
14 ‘ She 's very strict , ’ Vimla once told me , ‘ But they say that in her youth she was the best dancer in North India . ’
15 I quickly discovered that in her view it did n't have one , and that the only reason she had agreed to see me was to get this across once and for all .
16 The pain was such that in her anger she could not remember how much , or even if , she had loved Edmund .
17 These charities were originally administered by the Church or trustees appointed by the old vestry meetings , but with the Local Government Act of 1894 , they passed into the hands of the new parish councils , or such as still existed , for in 1893 , we find the local vicar complaining that most of the charities were dead and buried , and that Thomas Towers promised to give twenty shillings each Christmas Day , very kind of him no doubt , but unfortunately he left no provision for anybody to give it after he was dead , so that in his case he and benefaction are both dead and buried .
18 But London was a puzzle ; for Bede had told us that in his day it was ‘ a mart of many peoples ’ , a trading centre for merchants from overseas as well as for native traffickers .
19 One of his Residents reported that in his presence he felt himself become transparent , every aspect of his character laid bare to Lugard 's innocent penetration .
20 You have to remember that in his position it is very difficult to meet women . ’
21 How can a man who believes that from foetus to Senior Citizen Railcard his existence has been nothing but a nuisance , that in his wake he has left nothing but pain and trouble , possibly love himself ?
22 He concluded that in his opinion they had not .
23 Harbour had been in the middle of telling Freddie that in his opinion it was almost a blessing that the theatre would have to close .
24 The inspector advised him that in his opinion he had a drink problem and should do something about it .
25 It was noted that in his speech he stressed that Albania 's perestroika was irreversible and that economic reform would take priority , albeit at a gradual pace .
26 When Henry V landed for the first time on French soil nearly forty years later , it was soon put beyond doubt that in his artillery he possessed a potential match-winner .
27 He had worked out that in his job he got to handle over 6,000 pairs of dirty underpants from sixty countries each year .
28 Jim concluded gloomily that in his view we should go on sliding downhill for the next few years .
29 I 'm sorry , I just wanted to make a couple of points in response to erm things that people have said in relation to my opening statement , erm Mr Brook er mentioned the fact that er none of the employe none of the new settlement proposals of which he was aware , erm included an employment element , erm I just wanted to place on record the fact that our suggested reworking of policy H two does provide for an explicit land er amount of land for employment purposes , erm as part of the new settlement location , I wanted to say that because I , I 'm not invited to appear on your employment day , and I do feel that this is an important component of the the H two strategy , and clearly that employment component will be drawn from the Greater York allocation , the second point , Mr Sexton erm I believe said that in his view you could not find a site for a larger new settlement er within the or outside the Greater York er greenbelt , erm which would not result in physical coalescence with the existing villages in the area , now I 'm not sure whether he was referring to any particular size of larger new settlement , but I invite you to look at the er land range at one to fifty thousand er map of the area , and you will see that the area outside the greenbelt is characterized by erm a very rural area with sporadic villages , and my believe is that there are erm sites available within that area which could accommodate a larger new settlement , the planning point is of course the larger the new settlement becomes , I think the less that that the reduced number of sites you will have available to accommodate erm that proposal , because of its scale , and the third aspect I want to comment on Mr Cunnane and Mr Thomas erm said that Barton Willmore had not made a need argument for the new settlement , well if I 'm not mistaken that 's what we spent most of this morning discussing under policy H one , and I do n't erm I do n't wish , and I do n't suppose that I 'd be invited to repeat the comments made by Mr Grigson this morning , I do n't think there 's any need for that , but that establishes in our mind very clearly there is a need for a new settlement in the range of two thousand to two thousand five hundred dwellings , erm in the period up to two thousand and six , and I wo n't say anything more on that .
30 When they arrived , the Chinese had to inform him that in his absence he had been deposed by a military coup in Ghana .
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