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

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1 I do not mean to suggest that in every literal generation trees are taller than their counterparts in the previous generation , nor that the arms race is necessarily still going on .
2 I know that in every one of your homes there is a JNF Blue Box and I know that wherever it is in your homes it is not gathering dust .
3 Also controversial at Oxford at this time was the question whether man , being both body and soul , has both a corporeal and a spiritual form : Aquinas taught that in every corporeal being there is one substantial form .
4 For although Force Orders inevitably direct that such material will be submitted for assessment , it is typical that in a task-orientated institution which gives low priority or credence to the academic tome , the systems to ensure submission of the essays , or the ability to make much use of any useful ideas they contain , often remains sketchy .
5 ‘ Has n't anyone asked where he got them from ? ’ inquired Scarlet , who still imagined , in her innocence , that in a developed society blatant wrongdoing could not go unobserved and unmentioned .
6 It is envisaged that in a practical system a number of sub-domains may be declared with a component during its design , each monitoring differing aspects or regions of the model .
7 John Smith tried to kill off such speculation by emphasising that in a general election last week 's results would have given Labour a majority of 87 .
8 Genealogy develops the possibility broached in the Archaeology that in a general history different significances can be accorded to events , depending on ‘ their correlation with other previous or simultaneous events , discursive or not ’ .
9 Well , the fact that in a general election situation , people will go out and vote .
10 They said that in a political situation , if you had one side you could call it the thesis , say capitalism was the thesis and communism was the other side and that was the antithesis and that these two would one another and it was only when they came together and got their good points both of them adopted , that one was really going to get a satisfactory solution .
11 736 , I consider that it at least binds us to start from the position that in a similar case public interest immunity will apply and that any rebalancing should only be undertaken if there are additional factors which need to be taken into account .
12 Doctors have been slow to appreciate that in a similar way their standing in the community could be raised if they encouraged complaints , investigated them rigorously , and made restitution when appropriate .
13 Splitting this function into its partial fractions where Now comparison of coefficients of s shows that , or , Hence and application of equation ( 11.32 ) reveals that In a similar way from equations ( 11.32 ) and ( 11.35 ) .
14 We suppose that in a typical case only part of a lesson will involve the computer .
15 Suppose we show that in a present-day vernacular there is structured variation in verb-forms of the type he does/he do ( see Cheshire , 1982 , for a relevant study ) , with one form perhaps being preferred in formal styles and the other in casual styles : we may also — by comparing the speech of different social groups and age-groups — show that one form is progressing at the expense of the other .
16 And in that act we believe that in a spiritual sense that we are lifted up .
17 One aspect of scientific style , however , is that in a passive sentence the person who acts is often not mentioned at all , to symbolise the scientific ideal that the procedures should be objective and repeatable , independent of the agent who carries them out .
18 It seems to have arisen from the report of Levy-Agresti and Sperry ( 1968 ) that in a visuo-tactile matching task the two hemispheres of split-brain patients solved the problems in characteristically different ways .
19 One person pointed out that in a recent interview Nigel Hamilton , the man in charge of the Belfast Special Action Team and therefore of Making Belfast Work , stated that the money for Making Belfast Work was additional to government planned spending in North and West Belfast .
20 One of the two pollution control agencies studied reported , for instance , that in a recent twelve month period the average fine levied for pollution offences was £49 ( unpubl. agency document ) . ’
21 He claims that in a recent $20-billion arms deal between Britain and Saudi Arabia , a billion dollars ended up being shared by two senior Saudis .
22 Is my right hon. Friend aware that in a recent opinion poll only 8 per cent .
23 Polisario sources claimed that in a recent internal investigation he had been found guilty of corruption and diversion of funds .
24 It has been estimated that in a narrow clinical sense the Famine probably accounted for under 15 per cent of the extra mortality recorded at the height of the disaster in Saratov in 1921–2 : but in a broader sense , including deaths due to severe malnutrition and other causes , the Famine contributed to most of the rise in mortality that took place before the 1922 harvest .
25 Indeed , to stay at the Langham was such a mark of having arrived in the world , that in a nineteenth century fraud case , a witness would declare : ‘ I knew he was a perfect gentleman .
26 It seems not unreasonable to argue that in a modern primary school all staff , and especially those with formal responsibilities of any kind over and above the class-teacher role , should have clear and properly negotiated job specifications .
27 Remember that the spine is flexible , and that in a normal upright posture it describes a shallow double-S curve .
28 Remember that the spine is flexible , and that in a normal upright posture it describes a shallow double-S curve .
29 We can assume that in a normal working session a lexicographer will spend a relatively long time thinking as opposed to manipulating text .
30 The survey disclosed that in a three-week period , 309 vessels had passed through the firth and that 94 had refused to identify themselves .
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