Example sentences of "that [adv] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Owen thought that rather a pity as she had seemed very competent , quite capable of sorting out both Yussuf and his wife .
2 It was hoped that a small part of those works could stay in operation , renovating locomotives and rolling stock and that eventually a heritage museum could be set up on the site .
3 The catalogue recalls that in 1938 Brame and Lorenceau held an exhibition of Rousseau 's work which contributed to the revival of interest in that artist 's work , and goes on to express the hope that eventually a museum devoted to Barbizon painting may be set up .
4 Is it when the purchaser puts his money in or is that merely an offer which the machine accepts ?
5 I agree with my hon. Friend that perhaps a moral can be drawn from that .
6 No , I thought that perhaps a stroll down Unter den Linden — such memories for me there — and then I have another idea .
7 A survey by Apted suggested that perhaps a quarter to a third of university libraries have selection policy statements of some kind .
8 Alison waved from the window of the departing taxi and Celia waved back , a sudden feeling of depression taking hold of her to such an extent that she abandoned her idea of looking for a pram and set off , rather aimlessly , in the direction of Leicester Square in the faint hope that perhaps a cinema might take her mind off things .
9 It has been suggested that perhaps a Fairey Overdrive would give more flexibility between gears .
10 While he realises that there will always be problems in trying to teach anyone a new subject , Reas admits that it was sad to see a keen student being teased by his less keen classmates , but felt hopeful that perhaps a seed had been planted that one day would grow .
11 It does focus on the person in a way that perhaps a crime series does n't .
12 That it 's actually trying to enforce a pattern of family life that perhaps a lot of people do n't want ?
13 But then this leads to the idea that perhaps a number of women do not enjoy being part of a couple and that a single woman in their midst acts like a demented lighthouse : enticing hapless travellers , by its safe and steady beam , on to the rocks below .
14 But then I thought that perhaps an accident was awaiting me or one of my relatives .
15 More than a decade after the introduction of legislation against sex or race discrimination , it remains true that only a minority of senior business executives are women or members of racial minority groups .
16 Information collected about the relatives of cancer patients showed that only a minority have anything more than superficial contact with the staff caring for the patient , and a number of these relatives would have welcomed an opportunity to share their anxiety , not only about the patient but about their own feelings ( Bond , 1982 ) .
17 After a review of its operation in 1977 it became clear that only a minority of patients referred from the other hospitals were being successfully rehabilitated and that St Wulstan 's had become another long-stay hospital .
18 Mortality data indicate that only a minority of such deaths occur in ‘ the executive male ’ .
19 However , it should be noted at this stage that only a minority of elderly patients are heated by the geriatric services .
20 The proportion has now soared to two-thirds — DHSS figures for 1982 show that only a minority , 713,700 , exist on the £25 a week unemployment benefit alone — 2,612,000 " top up " with supplementary benefit , and another 1,428,500 depend on supplementary benefit alone .
21 Although the finding of a colorectal stricture in ulcerative colitis very appropriately raised concerns of cancer , all studies including our own indicate that only a minority of these strictures are in fact malignant .
22 It is well known that only a minority of alcoholics are afflicted with clinical pancreatitis and the issue of individual susceptibility to alcoholic pancreatitis has recently been reviewed .
23 The exception to this is that only a parent may receive the results of the pupil 's assessment .
24 She suspects that Charles suspects that she had once had an affair with Ivan , but of course she had not , though she concedes that Ivan is so unpleasant that only a degree of past sexual intimacy could plausibly explain the kind of relationship that he and Liz have over the years established .
25 She implied that only a fool could allow what was known as ‘ love ’ to enter into consideration in the matter .
26 On 22 January 1917 , President Wilson responded to the obduracy of the Allies with a passionate endorsement of the argument that only a peace without victory could lay the foundations for a world without war :
27 FISH THE ISLANDS AND BACKWATERS , FISH THOSE INACCESSIBLE SPOTS , ENJOY THAT MOBILITY THAT ONLY A CRUISER AND DINGHIES CAN GIVE YOU .
28 The plenum , in the event , made little influence upon the continuing discussion , and by the early 1990s it was clear that only a reconsideration of the very bases of Soviet statehood would be likely to satisfy the aspirations of the various republics and nationalities .
29 For too long now , she had been starved of one particular need , the kind a respectable woman should not dwell on for too long , a deep-down need that only a man could satisfy .
30 It was rightfully hers , of course ; but tradition said that only a man could rule the Wyrmberg .
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