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

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1 It might be added as an aside that it probably takes much more cultural energy to teach bellicosity and to produce warriors ( with spears as arms ) , than to teach co-operation and to produce shamans ( with ‘ thoughts ’ as arms ) .
2 However , it seems plausible that this source of energy has been of little importance in the past because Jupiter is so very massive that it probably formed very hot , though Jupiter may now be sufficiently cool for helium separation to have recently become significant , or for it to become significant in the relatively near future .
3 Whatever we may think of Oliphant 's views , we have to assume there would be little point in attacks on [ h ] -dropping by the educated elite unless it was highly salient and widespread , and it is reasonable to assume for these reasons that it probably has quite a long history in the language .
4 Under these tests , a country reserves the right to refuse an operating licence to a foreign firm if it deems that it already has enough similar companies on its territory .
5 If there was one ( albeit very small ) consolation about the sale of Dave Batty , it was that it finally did away with an important inferiority complex of mine — was I the only person in West Yorkshire not to be best mates with the man ? ?
6 The master 's conduct of his small class was so casual that it soon drifted away , but his influence on this pupil was decisive .
7 A point of greater relevance to the UK is that it also differs greatly from trading and investment blocs under which a country 's trade and investment flows to countries within the bloc are free but there are restrictions between the bloc as a whole and the rest of the world .
8 She recognised that he wanted her to forget what had happened , but that it also leapt vividly before his eyes and had a hold on him too .
9 Life there is so inexpensive that it just takes longer to get it all done .
10 Roots tripped him and rocks made him slip , and in places the path was so soft-edged that it simply dropped away from under him in the darkness .
11 Officially , the reason given was that it now seemed more sensible to store the highly active waste above ground for at least fifty years before disposing of it , probably in the form of glass blocks , and meanwhile allowing more of its intense heat to dissipate .
12 In a letter to the board 's 2,300 dairy farmers , the chairman , Andrew Howie , wrote that it now looked highly unlikely that the Government would accept the proposal for a voluntary co-op which retained its commercial company , Scottish Pride .
13 Whatever it 's called , though , one of the most gloomy facts about it is that it now spends more on weapons than on health and education put together
14 Labour 's hand on inflation would be strengthened if its leader were able to announce that it now supported early British entry into the exchange rate mechanism of the European monetary system .
15 The existing common law on breach of the peace has been continuously expanded so that it now adds greatly to the non-statutory powers of the police to restrict peaceful assembly ( see Chapter 4 ) .
16 They had ceased to be shocked by nudity , and accepted that it now happened mostly on remote beaches where it need n't offend any villagers .
17 It is tempting to dismiss Symphony as yesterday 's software on the grounds that it now looks very unexciting even as a DOS product .
18 So much had happened that it hardly seemed so important any more .
19 It is worth bearing in mind , however , that the de-criminalising of an activity ( the removing of an activity from the scope of criminal law ) does not mean that it necessarily becomes generally accepted .
20 We have merely aruged that such an existent necessarily belongs to only one such class , i.e. that it necessarily takes only one out of each pair of contradictory predicates .
21 The subject is not superficial , and the superficial treatment that it often receives perhaps explains our shallow and muddled thinking .
22 The whole island is like one huge tropical greenhouse , with the added attraction that it never gets too hot — a nice steady seventy degrees . ’
23 If you were not contacted please let me know so that it never happens again .
24 I realize that , you know I would say five of them five people in both departments champion of champions let's hope that it never happens again , you know , these things do happen .
25 ‘ Fru Møller just told that lady that it never rains here in August , but the dolls say it often does and they packed their mackintoshes ! ’
26 The ‘ unit of desire ’ however , is admitted to be a presumption , but if it were possible to prove with scientific exactitude that it really existed then it would not be within the province of religion at all , but of science .
27 It was all-embracing and claimed that it alone spoke authoritatively for the people .
28 In fact , the whole programme had an unsually philosophical undercurrent ( quoting , for example , philosopher Mary Midgeley ) — so much so that it sometimes seemed less like a current affairs report than an enquiry into a fundamental shift in Western attitudes to nature .
29 The ghost of my son pursued me yet , his translucent image being reflected from the trunk of every tree , so that it sometimes appeared ahead of me as well as on every side .
30 The point about measurement is that it only occurs spasmodically .
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