Example sentences of "that [pron] [vb base] [prep] an " in BNC.

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1 I had marked another part of that article — not the paragraph that I read in an intervention , which was near the paragraph quoted by the hon. Member for Rugby and Kenilworth .
2 They 'd have registered the fact that I work for an advertising agency , and marked me accordingly : ‘ I do think essentially he 's a popular artist , do n't you ? ’
3 I hardly imagine that I look like an habitual criminal , anyway . ’
4 You then see the light-catching quality that you get with an edge of glass . ’
5 Rate of return : Here , the rate of return is the minimum that you require from an investment .
6 One of the first things you 'll realise is that you work for an organisation that has to react and respond rapidly to changing circumstances .
7 The New York graffiti craze , which meant just spray-painting your name again and again , was the most basic , single-minded assertion that you exist in an indifferent world .
8 He then drifted gloomily away , noting that this could not be ‘ an open-ended matter that you do in an idealistic whim ’ .
9 And he felt that it would be in a sense a miracle to produce a detailed adaptation to a particular way of life , a kind of adaptation to being fertilized by bees that you see in an orchid , by a single a large jump .
10 ‘ Has anybody ever told you that you look like an older version of Jacqueline Bisset ? ’
11 But that that we ask for an exploration of the feasibility of widening the use of homes into nursing care , very sheltered accommodation , apartment style accommodation etcetera .
12 It 's something that we regard as an interesting development .
13 The heart of true faith is that we enter into an experience of God which takes up our whole being , emotions included .
14 No what amazes me Mr Chairman is that here we are , we 're being cost conscious on every ground and we 're saying we 're making a statement that we enter into an exercise that we have no idea , we 're not asking for the actual cost , we are asking , we are asking you must of had an idea what it would cost or I feel Mr Chairman that that , can I put it mildly , lack of planning and certainly financial planning possibly
15 An analogy might be the lip-reading that we do at an unconscious level .
16 It is very rare that we disagree as an industry , but it is equally rare that we speak in a co-ordinated way , ’ he said .
17 The major difference between the American and British systems is that we vote for an MP , the party with the most MPs wins and its leader moves into Number Ten .
18 Technological advances might mean that we live in an artificial environment with respect to time-cues , but it is a rhythmic environment nevertheless , and our possession of a body clock means that all the advantages that come from the integration of biological and environmental rhythms apply equally to ourselves .
19 It is true that we live in an age when people are increasingly more likely to act on intuition , but many are still able to calculate when two and two add up to five .
20 We are told — usually by un-bought artists — that we live in an increasingly visual culture .
21 My hon. Friend is right to say that we live in an increasingly competitive environment and that much in the social action programme would damage that competitiveness within the European Community — to the interests of the Japanese , the United States and our other competitors .
22 It is also a comfort that we run in an environment where the whole file system is backed up every night .
23 We can explain that they come from an age when theology and the natural sciences were not divorced from one another , when God was held directly responsible for disasters we would now call ‘ natural ’ , and for which we would have scientific explanations to hand that did not mention God at all .
24 What has been taken as kind of definition , which I 'll paraphrase I think for this purpose , is that it 's a condition that shows itself in children 's reading difficulty and erm that they are having this reading difficulty despite the fact that they have had reasonable , normal teaching , that their level of intelligence appears to be normal and that they come from an adequate social cultural background .
25 If the failure of the ‘ ideological forms ’ lies in the operation of an idealist epistemology , the specific instances of ideological forms ( religion , aesthetics , the law , politics , philosophy ) that Marx mentions , seem doomed only to the extent that they depend on an idealist epistemology .
26 What is most worrying about these two episodes is that they smack of an orchestrated campaign on the part of the English rugby powers-that-be to create added tension between nations , for which Brian Moore is singularly well-equipped to be the aggressive mouthpiece .
27 In principle , however , the public law nature of the SROs ' rules and the fact that they operate in an integrated way with the SIB 's rules should mean that a court is able to take the same approach to the interpretation of both the SROs ' and the SIB 's rules .
28 I do not possess any pornographic publications or pictures of couples in lubricious postures , though I am aware that they exist to an ever more proliferating degree , and I have seen these things in Robert 's room and in my agent 's office .
29 Yet one of the striking characteristics of Shakespeare 's Sonnets is that they exist on an almost universal level ; they are generalized ( with none of the depersonalization that usually goes with generalization ) ; they are widely , perhaps indefinitely applicable .
30 The next two chapters use case studies to expand the framework that they provide for an appreciation of the variety among places , without explicit recognition of the interactions with the physical and built environments ( although both are implicit , especially in the first ) .
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