Example sentences of "that [pron] [verb] [adv prt] in " in BNC.

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1 It was fortuitous that my slackening off in actual programme production at CBC coincided with an increasing social activity , mainly with the Semmens family , whose house I had almost begun to regard as home .
2 I put on that your newsletter that I sent round in York er to tell staff we were going for it again , so you know th
3 That I got up in the night and walked into an open press . ’
4 There are no colours — it kinda bugs me out , I just feel so f—ing glad , so incredibly lucky , that I grew up in America .
5 I get to act out all the horrors and pressures of fame , and some of the things that I worry about in my own life are purged .
6 It was having the same sorts of mainly damaging effects on people 's personal lives and on their family lives and so on , and in research that I carried out in Brighton erm over the past three or four years we were looking at these effects — how they were affecting unemployed people in Brighton — and trying to explain them .
7 I 've already revealed that I started out in a donkey jacket , but I should add that it took me at least ten years to get a decent kit .
8 Not content with claiming that I ended up in jail , many people have been led to believe that I murdered my wife , who , I can state categorically , is still living in Selly Oak , Birmingham .
9 allow and they reckon that soft ones are better suited too sports because , because of the great action they 're harder to , to knock out , whereas soft ones er , have better other qualities , I 've got this little fucking book , book that I picked up in the Boots in Farnborough the other day yes , its quite interesting .
10 I would wager that he goes so far as to say that I broke down in his room , stuttering out the words of my so-called confession between chokes and tears , unable to speak properly .
11 I was just so furious that I swept out in high dudgeon .
12 I was amazed that someone brought up in nineteenth-century Yorkshire could understand so completely the deprivation and frustration of being a hostage .
13 ‘ Debbie was born there and we still have a place there , but not the same one that she grew up in .
14 Roman sat on a corner of her desk and looked at her with such a grave expression that she cried out in alarm .
15 The beginning , a long time ago , was quite clear : sitting up in bed at home , swinging her feet round to the floor , standing up — and a warm flood spilling down her legs so that she cried out in fright .
16 The full impact of it seemed to come from the roof , and was so strong that she jerked up in bed .
17 Mrs J. was a dominant person , so much so that she ended up in hospital suffering from malnutrition , as she had refused to eat .
18 ‘ You mean to say that you go out in all weathers — hail , rain–snow , sunshine — and run up and down for nothing ? ’
19 We can bring you back at home or if they insist that you go back in an ambulance , you may , they may not put you back home you know , have you thought of that ?
20 ‘ It is only because you want to pry , to discover who writes to me , that you come out in this way every morning .
21 He said : ‘ These are not 500 bananas that you pick up in a supermarket and put in your basket and take somewhere else .
22 When you were talking about your dredging earlier on , you used to take th the soil that you dredged up in the mud , in your dredger out t employ the hoppers out to sea .
23 Erm how do people sort of beco when you become a member of a group , usually in some way the group changes you as you go through different stages of it , your values may change as a result of interacting with people in the group and th this process of erm somebody 's come up with how it is that you start off in a group , how it is that you become an active member of a group , how it is you may even become involved in the maintenance of the group and the leadership of it and then you sort of die away and that 's the y'know retire from the group .
24 The good news is that , even in the minority of cases where the only solution is to leave your job and try your luck elsewhere , it is unusual for a dispute to arise that is so serious that you finish up in front of a judge or an industrial tribunal .
25 The next exercise involves simplifying the figure into blocks and cylinders , so that you build up in your mind a conception of the body as a solid object .
26 The next exercise involves simplifying the figure into blocks and cylinders , so that you build up in your mind a conception of the body as a solid object .
27 Anybody that works in a lesson that you doss about in , that you know you 're going to doss about in , that 's it , you get called ‘ ponce ’ and everything . ’
28 It had begun to seem like the ideas he 'd had when he was younger , that you worked out in school and at night in bed , that seemed so easy , then when it carne to it did n't work out .
29 And then you know , we 've got a car there that we come back in otherwise we wo n't be able to come back .
30 For most other jobs that we take on in life , there will be an element of training , but , in the case of achieving or maintaining health through diet , this is not always so .
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