Example sentences of "be that at [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The finest in the series is that at Stoke d'Abernon , Surrey , to Elyn Bray , who died in 1516 . |
2 | The finest of the cathedrals is that at Basle , which has a picturesque situation on the Rhine . |
3 | Racism is not unique to Western culture — what matters is that at present the West has the power to go with it . |
4 | But what I 'm trying to explain is that at night the hrududil have great lights , brighter than Frith himself . |
5 | The fact is that at Preston station I lost my personal space . |
6 | The best-known example in Britain is that at Lydney Park , excavated by Wheeler in 1928 . |
7 | What you may not expect however is that at Saab , although we build things to last , we do n't expect them to last indefinitely . |
8 | What we mean by this , is that at times of great stress we can all be overwhelmed by the experience and find ourselves ‘ at sea ’ , not knowing what to do . |
9 | My one gripe is that at times the control system is not as good as expected . |
10 | A fine example of this type of abbey church is that at Løgumkloster , founded in 1173 by the Cistercian Order . |
11 | The difference is that at Butlins a one-bedroom flat makes a four -bedspace chalet . |
12 | What can be said about fluoride is that at concentrations of even less than one part per million ( the official dose ) it can cause toxic reactions in sensitive people and recent reassessments of the fluoridation scene suggest that this measure may be much more harmful to health than has been hitherto realized . |
13 | One of the largest settlements in Gloucestershire is that at Bourton-on-the-Water , which has spread westwards from the Iron Age fort at Salmonsbury towards the Fosse Way , which it treats almost as a secondary feature ( fig. 7.4 ) ; but it is here , where the road bridge crosses the Windrush , that Mrs Helen O'Neil has found a Posting . |
14 | The most remarkable example of such a deposit in Britain is that at Llyn Cerrig Bach in Anglesey , found by a contractor during the last war when he was digging for peat . |
15 | Another extensive Gloucestershire settlement is that at Wycomb , near Andoversford , first investigated in 1864 . |
16 | My belief is that at Co-ordinators Meeting we should examine that concern and discover a workable and economic way of expressing it . |
17 | The reason was that at midnight , five-and-a-half hours after the evening 's entertainment was due to begin , further education , tertiary and sixth form colleges left county council control . |
18 | One such was that at Charfield built during the first half of the 19th century . |
19 | ‘ The difference was that at Virgin , in answering the question ‘ what do we do well ? ’ people immediately thought in terms of the customer whereas in the health service you have to tease it out . |
20 | Jimmy said he really enjoyed playing , but his slight worry about it was that at £13.99 it might prove expensive for the unemployed . |
21 | The main substance to their complaints was that at £26 a ticket they were not receiving value for money . |
22 | The reason was that at Trico the district committee ( which in the engineering union structure is a very important body ) was dominated by the left while at Electrolux it was controlled by the right . |
23 | The only new Mission for the deaf that seems to have opened for the first time in the 1890s was that at Oxford , although the deaf people of Bradford almost lost their own when a fire was discovered in the coal cellar under the offices by one of the deaf members who ran to summon the fire brigade from its nearby station . |
24 | The unusual thing about this was that at Binbrook there was an engineering type called Matthew , a corporal , who also played this instrument , and it did n't take long for the two to discover each other . |
25 | The measure of his performance was that at lunch he held a nine-stroke lead over the other morning starters . |
26 | To achieve this he carried it over roads and streams by means of aqueducts , of which the most notable was that at Barton ( two hundred yards long and nearly forty feet above the Irwell ) , crossed valleys by embankments , cut through hills where they were unavoidable , and followed the contours where possible . |
27 | Such great open-air markets can be seen at Northampton , Newark and Leicester , for example , and most notable of all was that at Nottingham , where the vast triangular market place covers five-and-a-half acres and was once even larger . |
28 | Stones were also set up along the Great North Road in 1708 , but the first true milestone to be set up in Britain since Roman times was that at Trumpington , just outside Cambridge , in 1727 , where it is still to be seen . |