Example sentences of "that [pron] [vb -s] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The problem is , however , that it is of little help in producing a list of user needs : the temptation would be to say either that everyone requires the same information or that everyone requires different information ; the former would make the exercise redundant and the latter would make it impossible to handle .
2 They are both friendly and helpful and take an interest in their guests itineraries making sure that everyone makes the most of their stay .
3 The economist 's definition of public goods relies solely on the fact that everyone consumes the same quantity .
4 Is it to be given to ensure that everyone has the correct drawing or to save time ?
5 Such scepticism seems academic against the working assurance that everyone means the same by ‘ The bus is late ’ and ‘ It 's going to rain' .
6 But that does not mean that the particular institutional arrangements of a particular society ( namely that which provides the normal context for the use of modern English ) can serve as a paradigm for all others .
7 You 're always afraid that somebody buys the same presents .
8 The student must understand that nobody likes the reduced ‘ g ’ sensation at first , but that individuals differ in their reactions to it .
9 She 's refuting claims that she thinks the famous topless photos were a Palace plot to discredit the Duchess .
10 That is not to say that she forgets the outrageous moments .
11 We see her so with Theseus again on a near-contemporary Attic cup ( fig. 98 ) ; and it is presumably in the same role that she dominates the latest and best preserved of all archaic pediments , at the two ends of a temple on Aegina , dedicated to Aphaia , a local deity associated with Artemis rather than Athena .
12 It 's just that she likes the odd nip .
13 Actress , Suda Bhuchar , explains that she likes the positive role she plays and that her character has become more rounded in this , the second series .
14 Clinton denial : Hillary Clinton dismissed as ‘ nonsense ’ rumours that she has the final say on all of her husband 's high-level government appointments .
15 [ Betty ] Sinclair adopted a ‘ cross that bridge when we come to it ’ attitude , which means that she wants the back door left open for a sell-out .
16 It is in these brasses that one discovers the three different ways of positioning the arms of a corpse .
17 It is not just that one supplements the Other : .
18 Phil : Well I would say that if I had my life over again I wish and hope that everything happens the same , and I think at the end of the day Becky had been the cream on top of the cake …
19 When shall we learn that whoever touches the higher life and well-being of the family still more vitally affects the wider family of the State , and threatens its disintegration … the State as an organized polity , capable of embodying , preserving and promoting the higher life of the nation .
20 In the final analysis , I hope that whoever acquires the independent groups will be committed to road transport and to public service vehicle activities .
21 Lastly , although it would be nice to feel that everybody charts the forward direction absolutely correctly , the reality of life is that this is an almost impossible ambition .
22 One advantage of the correction of twice the number of degrees off track , is that it produces the two equal sides of an isosceles triangle .
23 Attempting to copy a decorative technique can confirm or disprove that it produces the same appearance and microstructure observed on the original item .
24 The d.c. supply voltage ( V5 ) is chosen so that it produces the rated winding current ( 1 ) when applied to the total phase circuit resistance , which is equal to the sum of the phase winding ( r ) and forcing ( R ) resistances : In general the phase winding has a considerable inductance , so its natural electrical time constant ( inductance/resistance ) is long .
25 The key value of this interpretation is that it separates the internal ( impairment ) and external ( Disability ) causes of disadvantage .
26 The title Chair is useful in that it separates the formal role from the person occupying it . )
27 Conventionalism is a conception — an interpretation — of legal practice and tradition ; its fate depends on our ability to see in our practice conventions of the kind that it considers the exclusive grounds of law .
28 The response of Dr P to communications , it will be remembered , is that it ignores the aesthetic , that it is so obsessed with ‘ ideological statements and political texts ’ that it can no longer make a distinction between good and bad .
29 Failure to do so would confirm the fear of those who say that the Government is so hell-bent on pursuing ideology that it ignores the pressing needs of our industrial community in the build-up to 1992 .
30 Anderson 's long turn , therefore , amounts to an extreme example of what Brown and Yule describe as 'speaking on a topic " , rather than 'speaking topically " ( Brown and Yule 1983 : 84 ) , in that it ignores the previous speaker 's utterance in order to develop a new topic .
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