Example sentences of "that [adj] [art] [noun] [pers pn] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I I turn that that the point I made about the the the lack of inquiry because er er in effect we know very little about what went wrong with B C C I and particularly what went wrong with the audit er of B C C I because we have n't had an inquiry er into this country and to what went wrong in that instance .
2 Er I just want wanted to pick up on your your opening remarks , sir , after coffee , that that the impression you had was that the the the districts , erm , could live with a that the County Council figures .
3 It turns out that half the words she 's been teaching me are all wrong .
4 ‘ He told me that half the bacteria I 'm developing are lethal , ’ says Jack .
5 Perhaps the greatest contribution that fictional novels can make to human rights and changing attitudes is in giving us a timely reminder that all the statistics we 're constantly bombarded with actually constitute human lives , just as valuable as our own .
6 ‘ They 've come all this way to see you and is that all the welcome they get , ’ Rose chided gently .
7 Assuming that all the materials you have are equally suitable for your students , the main distinguishing feature of the video materials is likely to be that they provide the most realistic examples of the language in use .
8 I think it 's a matter of fact that all the schemes I have seen have included an element of best and most versatile land .
9 It is important to be able to think about what has taken place once the session is over and to know that all the things you said were a product of your own subconscious and therefore likely to be extremely relevant to your own development .
10 Erm and it 's talking about this er accommodation theory Giles ' accommodation theory which has one main assumption erm that all the things I 've just mentioned about pronunciation and speech rates and things , erm they all occur in in order to encourage more interaction between the two speakers .
11 She soon decided that the house was the most beautiful place she had ever seen , and though she had little experience of antique furniture or fine art works she immediately recognised that all the things she saw were of the highest quality .
12 You see , I promised myself that all the money I earned out there in Australia should go to you !
13 It was well for Breeze that all the holidays she had spent in St Petrock 's had accustomed her to invalids — but even so , she had never seen anybody who looked as ill as the old , old man who lay propped up on cushions in the corner facing the engine .
14 He 'd complain that all the work he was doing did n't seem to be making him any bigger . ’
15 He subsequently received letters from CSRG and university counsel claiming that all the work he had contributed to Berkeley since NET2 was ‘ University proprietary , ’ a phrase he had never heard before .
16 He explained that all the answers he had found were in odd numbered positions in the sequence .
17 One , one might argue that erm one might argue that there is a cynical implication thereupon , one might argue that but , but in i i in exactly the same way at the moment you might argue that all the assurances they 've given on Hong Kong are , are not worth the paper they 're written on and , and , and as soon as the , soon as you get through to nineteen ninety seven they 'll walk in .
18 As the old lady talked to her , she realised that all the tales she had heard about her were nonsense .
19 It was delicious to be close to Alain , to belong to him , to know that all the time she had been alone he had been thinking about her .
20 The Blake case is still extremely sensitive because Blake was authorised to do some very terrible things in the East-West espionage war without MI6 being aware that all the time he was one of Russia 's most important agents .
21 And William began to run from the approaching cart , which was piled high with the bodies of the plague victims , and as he ran the streets became the familiar streets of his childhood and he knew that all the time he was running from the terrible cart he was getting closer and closer to the dark house by the railway embankment with its shuttered windows and its locked door , and that this was more terrible to him than anything in his history books .
22 ‘ The trouble is that I know that all the time he 's only trying to ingratiate himself in order to get me to agree to a merger .
23 I am satisfied that the deceased encouraged the plaintiff in the belief that all the property he possessed at the date of his death would pass to her , and I do not consider that the fact that he made certain gifts during his lifetime , and indicated a wish to make others , including the gift of a legacy to the plaintiff 's son is inconsistent with such a belief .
24 He was a reductionist who believed that all the relationships he investigated could be explained in materialistic terms .
25 We have an awkward , and increasingly tense discussion about the use of such songs — for though I wholeheartedly agree that all the ideas they promote are self-evidently good things , I worry simply whether such songs have any positive effect — and they start bandying the word ‘ cynic ’ .
26 Yes I think that may be right my Lord , indeed er if we succeed on the way out , get get out of the contract point then of course the plaintiff 's case is that they would have taken that advice and would not have entered into the contract a and therefore on that basis they are entitled to be compensated on the basis that all the losses they unnecessarily incurred by having , being forced to complete , should be recoverable , subject to er litigation of loss and .
27 ‘ All I do know , Roger , is that all the deaths we have witnessed , all the mysteries we have faced , have their origin in what happened at Flodden . ’
28 Clothes were all very well , they were her father 's life and she knew that all the privileges she enjoyed were hers because of clothes and the stupendous success they had brought him , but she could n't care about them .
29 make sure that all the information you give is as accurate as possible ;
30 The means by which LIFESPAN checks the module header of a proposed module to check that all the information it contains has been correctly formatted and is in the correct place .
  Next page