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

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1 Am I so negligible , she asked herself indignantly , that everyone feels this compulsion to speak for me ?
2 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 .
3 Remember , though , that everyone makes more mistakes in copying than in original writing , so you may end up with more errors in the rewritten piece than in the original .
4 Patients in and around Exeter can use the cards to present to doctors , dentists and hospitals so that everyone has easy access to their medical history .
5 Traditional building materials such as mud will have a role to play only when the national objective is to ensure that everyone has better housing now .
6 The chairman will also have to organize the panel during the interview , making sure that everyone has sufficient time to ask their questions but without allowing the process to get out of hand and overrun .
7 I take it that no-one claims exclusive rights in this field .
8 This way of justifying a claim that someone has legitimate authority , i.e. that those subject to his authority should acknowledge the authoritative force of his directives , is not the only one .
9 A purely linguistic account of authority claims to yield a simple explanation of what people believe who believe that someone has legitimate authority .
10 Furthermore , the duty to uphold and support just institutions is , in some respects , wider than the duty which devolves on one as a result of the fact that someone has legitimate authority over one , in three different ways .
11 For what he means by Religion , as he points out , is that which underlies all religions .
12 It is very important in this environment that somebody administers each system otherwise it becomes cluttered or unvetted ( and for example , objectionable ) messages may be sent to others .
13 And if it is the manner in which I address her which concerns you , let me tell you that she derives great enjoyment from such acerbic exchanges .
14 It is not that she possesses dazzling charm or an especially brilliant intellect , but he enjoys her company so long as he thinks their friendship is platonic .
15 Julia admits that she resents linguistic laws just as she resents the canon law of the Church : ‘ I 'm interested in language as a process , not a thing or an essence .
16 And the beauty of it is that she embodies this core value of intimacy in her music better than anyone else who 's arrived on the scene in years .
17 He is annoyed that she does little cleaning and that the burden of getting Keith and Amy up and breakfasted is always his responsibility .
18 Alternatively , the reader can interpret this as a sign of her weakness , that she requires this support to justify her actions .
19 Of course it 's just possible that she has poor eyesight — a woman like that would be too vain to wear spectacles .
20 This is not to say that she has much time for the developers ' current products .
21 If she complains of stress incontinence but denies any urgency or urge incontinence her doctor can safely assume that she has genuine stress incontinence .
22 I 've noticed that she has good bladder control .
23 Examples of this reciprocal effect lie in the man who is engrossed in his work to the detriment of his married life or the woman who is so wrapped up in her children that she has little time for her husband .
24 She even pretends that she has higher principles than many of the other characters in the play :
25 That 's why it 's so important that she has efficient help . ’
26 The experience of being molested once as a child and then a man jumping in her car at 21 yrs and her running away remained with her so that she has persistent fear of being attacked and the sense of someone being behind her .
27 She is prone to pointing out to journalists that she has ugly hands ( her assessment ) , says she grew up thinking she was plain and now is so embarrassed by her appearance on screen that she never sees her films unless she 's forced to .
28 She thinks I let Norman down somehow by marrying a plumber — not that she has any job at all !
29 This criterion does not apply to the pronouns he and she ( do n't be fooled by the fact that she has more letters ; it still has only two sounds ) .
30 Your daughter does n't live extravagantly enough for it to be noticed that she has more money than the average student .
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