Example sentences of "that [verb] at [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He found that gazing at the CO 's moustache helped .
2 In appraising the trial 's results it would therefore be helpful to know the indications for transfusion that applied at the Queen Mother 's Hospital during the trial and whether the decision to transfuse was made without knowledge of the policy on cord clamping .
3 PONCE : The bit that goes at the end of ‘ Res ’ to make up the word ‘ Response ’ .
4 The ministers denied that de Klerk knew about the payments , arguing that prodecures at the time had not required him to know .
5 It is this tension between the grandiose themes of cosmology and its mundane workings that sits at the heart of Dennis Overbye 's superb book .
6 The chance has come in a review conducted by Andrew Large , chairman of the Securities and Investments Board ( SIB ) , the body that sits at the apex of Britain 's regulatory structure .
7 Their first single ‘ Mystery Train ’ is restructured with bleeps and beats to sound altogether moodier , while ‘ Senses ’ is one of those emotional anthems that sits at the end of the set .
8 Bob , the old bum that sleeps at the bus station , just stared .
9 People in temperate countries pay little attention to mangroves : trees that grow at the ocean s edge .
10 The plans showed over forty rooms and vestibules on four elevations , with two staircases , two lifts that stopped at every floor , hot and cold running water in all five bathrooms , water closets that flushed , electric light , a cellar , a garage and a garden .
11 The train was a slow one that stopped at every station and I was eventually discovered , clutching my red handbag and Arthur , in Carlisle where the train terminated .
12 In delayed release preparations ( Asacol , Claversal ) , 5-ASA is coated with an acrylic based resin that dissolves at a pH greater than 6 .
13 Erm , let's start with the simpler issues though , that mentioned at the beginning .
14 A final analysis problem that we will consider is that mentioned at the end of Chapter 8 — how to deal with syllabic consonants .
15 I took him into the business with me , you know , after all that bother at the Turk 's Head . ’
16 Pope Clement , however , was not inclined to agree and that occurred at a time when the people of England were annoyed at the imposition of heavy taxation by the Cardinal Morton , also Cardinal Wolsey .
17 Slowly the stillness rose in a tide that lapped at the rage within her ; her breathing steadied .
18 If the sense of the magnetic field is irrelevant , but the same physics applies as for the first reversal , the pole that starts at the North Geographic Pole must once again pass through the Americas .
19 I said , people that knock at the door and say , the taxi 's ready the taxi man does n't come and do it .
20 In the last couple of years , Paul Merton has emerged from a tidal wave of British comic talent , that swelled at the beginning of the Eighties and continues to rain all around us , and has done so on a laugh raft all of his own .
21 Doyle indicated the tall building , just visible behind the scattered beech and ash trees that clustered at the bottom of every garden , and along the small roadways .
22 or you could use one or more of the questions that appear at the end of each section of the main text of this booklet .
23 Enthusiastic supporters claimed that the movement gave to ‘ the Free Churches a unity they have never had before ’ although this same observer recognized that it was ‘ the Establishment that lies at the foundation of our contention ’ .
24 The other school of thought on hypnosis emphasises the special social situation that lies at the core of hypnosis .
25 The plasterwork has peeled to reveal the red sandstone underneath ; and in places that sandstone has in turn crumbled away to reveal the intricate brickwork that lies at the core of the structure .
26 The theory that lies at the core of Layard 's analysis is the ‘ real wage resistance ’ hypothesis : workers have a target real wage which they strive to achieve and defend through the wage bargaining process .
27 I suspect that if we were to take a sensate tension structure such as the love-hate paradox that lies at the heart of Shakespeare 's Romeo and Juliet theme , we would be able to transpose it into different forms each appropriate to a particular culture , and , provided we had the necessary skill of course , we would be able to do this for all cultures in the world .
28 It is the attempt to examine some of these interdisciplinary intersections that lies at the heart of this text .
29 Associativity provides a cellular analogue of classical conditioning , and is an implicit property of the Hebb synapse , the computing element that lies at the heart of the current interest in neural computation .
30 Although the campaigns in which Mrs Whitehouse and her associates have been involved during this period may , on the surface , seem particularly disparate and eclectic , if one looks below the surface — as Tracey and Morrison have done particularly thoroughly — then it is the diminishing influence of the Church in moral issues that lies at the heart of NVALA action and concern .
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