Example sentences of "many [noun pl] that [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Mark has told you guys many times that European Governments and European plant people ai n't gon na like that one little bit , particularly when their own Far East markets are heavily protected .
2 This incident made me realise that our careful descriptions of the relationship between dialect and Standard English might be misread , and so in the final Report I insisted that we should reiterate many times that all pupils should learn , and if necessary be explicitly taught , Standard English .
3 There are many forms that such services may take ; there is excessive reliance on the charity of volunteers to provide services that ought in principle to be publicly funded ; funding problems seem to be chronic .
4 Although this place has heard tales of much horror and beastliness over the many generations that hon. Members have spoken about the plight of victims throughout the history of this place , I suggest that the plight of the people whose human rights we will discuss this morning transcends almost every other horror that we have heard here .
5 But it was said by many doubters that British Airways could never be privatised .
6 Apart from the general belief of many constitutionalists that all Acts of Parliament should apply to the United Kingdom , including Northern Ireland , that is a real mistake .
7 It has been known for many years that rich clusters contain a lot of gas and dark matter , but Ponman and Bertram 's result shows that these features apply more generally .
8 There has been a suspicion for many years that high rates of stomach cancer in parts of Wales may be linked to soil chemistry , specifically such factors as zinc/copper ratios , and to lead content in water supplies .
9 There was a concern in many quarters that local authorities should be controlled by officers and councillors more in tune with the needs and methods of local industry and commerce .
10 In fact people have killed so many tigers that two races are probably extinct .
11 Such restraining views are typical of many that are fully justified by the emphasis upon process studies that characterized the 1960s and 1970s and led to smaller investment of resources in historical studies and to the fear that process studies will not profitably link back with chronological ones — in fact there are many indications that such links are happening again including the way in which physical geographers who have been mainly concerned with processes and modelling are moving towards evolution .
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