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

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1 I I 've got a paper somewhere that refers to this business , I do n't know where .
2 Silicon Graphics Inc 's Mips R4400-based server announcement this week will reportedly also include a new high-end Indigo workstation that goes to 100 SPECmarks and a new graphics subsystem that outperforms the current Reality Engine ( UX Nos 407 , 413 ) .
3 Quite apart from the bizarre situation of a bought log book and contact lenses , you have got to also measure the style of a fellow that goes to those lengths to do something he wants to do , and wants to do badly .
4 The answer to these questions lies in the intense international rivalry to be first with fusion , a rivalry that persists to this day .
5 A sizable majority of respondents in each of the remaining categories , including local law societies , agreed that grants to individual clients should continue to be unlimited .
6 ‘ Um … the one that belongs to that Mrs Daffodil Quentin , I think .
7 The skill in midlife is to discover the beauty that belongs to that stage in life and to accept it willingly .
8 Fortunately , being a nurse , she had the built-in weakness for the sick that belongs to all nurses .
9 Ports , especially great ports , are never quite where they seem to be — a corner , a quay , the light filtering past funnels and masts on either side , there is always something that belongs to other places and other times .
10 But still this expression tells you ‘ what happened ’ only if you are at home in the special conceptual world that belongs to these situations .
11 Result : no more internationals for the Sant' Elia and a frigidity on footballing relations between Ireland and the continent that lingers to this day .
12 A constructivist would deny the existence of anything that corresponds to this conception of a phenomenal screen .
13 The rankings range from 5 — ( Research quality that equates to attainable levels of international excellence in some sub-areas of activity and to attainable levels of national excellence in virtually all others ) - to 1 — ( Research quality that equates to attainable levels of national excellence in none , or virtually none , of the sub-areas of activity ) .
14 The rankings range from 5 — ( Research quality that equates to attainable levels of international excellence in some sub-areas of activity and to attainable levels of national excellence in virtually all others ) - to 1 — ( Research quality that equates to attainable levels of national excellence in none , or virtually none , of the sub-areas of activity ) .
15 It sounds like a soap opera but so does any tragedy ( ! ) that happens to real people .
16 He stares at the streets near him and hopes the grief he sees there is something that happens to other people .
17 The following remark of Dennis Altman 's , even if not strictly correct historically , rightly implies how the negation of desire and the negation of difference are in practice often inseparable : ‘ the original purpose of the categorization of homosexuals as people apart was to project the homosexuality in everyone onto a defined minority as a way of externalizing forbidden desires and reassuring the majority that homosexuality is something that happens to other people ’ ( Homosexualization , 72 ) .
18 CRIME is no longer something that happens to other people .
19 Nevertheless , it is likely that answers to these questions will be found over the next few years , and that by the end of the century we shall know whether string theory is indeed the long sought-after unified theory of physics .
20 I will attempt to show that answers to this question have to do with the almost hidden insidious nature of modern life .
21 Having plumped for Hewlett-Packard Co 's PA RISC over the Intel i860 — ‘ because of price/performance ’ — for its next generation of systems , Stratus plans no further computers using the i860 at this time , but says that depends to some extent on whether Intel manages another iteration of its RISC .
22 Brothers and sisters , I say to you that the message that must leave this Conference is one that says to all trade unionists , we will fight any oppressive legislation used against us .
23 He worked himself up into the kind of rage that leads to unforgivable things being said .
24 In considering this , Stoker and Williams conclude that when gastric and duodenal secretions mix there may be a toxic synergism between the two that leads to mucosal disruption and intracellular damage to oesophageal cells .
25 They point out that under the first-past-the-post system a small swing in votes tends to produce a major change in parliamentary strength so " exaggerating " a party 's lead in parliament in a way that leads to sharp swings in policy when there are only small shifts in voting and still more limited changes in public opinion .
26 v. Intellectualisation — Again , the fear that leads to interminable intellectualisation is understandable because of the social stigma of alcoholism or drug addiction or other forms of addictive disease even though misdiagnosis has significant risks for the sufferer , for others in the workplace and for the Company itself .
27 Although the physical act of taking a drink or drug is technically self-induced , the spiritual disease that leads to this compulsion is a disease that has clearly identifiable characteristics and outcomes , that runs in families and may even be genetically inherited ( this does not mean that if your parents have addictive disease then you will necessarily also have addictive disease , but it does mean that there is a higher chance of your having it ) and therefore the existence of the disease may be totally beyond the control of the sufferer .
28 ‘ Anyone who gives me the information that leads to these people will get the reward money , ’ he said .
29 Sometimes the in-service provision relates to one language only : indeed it has been found that approaches to initial literacy are difficult to generalise beyond basic principles .
30 For example , where pragmatics is construed as the study of grammatically encoded aspects of context , we might want to say : ( 18 ) f(s)=c where c is the set of contexts potentially encoded by elements of S i.e. f is a theory that " computes out " of sentences the contexts which they encode Or , alternatively , where pragmatics is defined as the study of constraints on the appropriateness of utterances , we could say : ( 19 ) f(u)=a where A has just two elements , denoting the appropriate vs. the inappropriate utterances i.e. f is a theory that selects just those felicitous or appropriate pairings of sentences and contexts — or identifies the set of appropriate utterances Or , where pragmatics is defined ostensively as a list of topics , we could say : ( 20 ) f(u)=b where each element of B is a combination of a speech act , a set of presuppositions , a set of conversational implicatures , etc. i.e. f is a theory that assigns to each utterance the speech act it performs , the propositions it presupposes , the propositions it conversationally implicates , etc .
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