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

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1 Levi-Strauss ( 1969 ) noted that such taboos certainly exist and a notorious modern example of it is found in the immorality laws of South Africa which forbid sexual relations between blacks and whites .
2 It perhaps ought to be pointed out here that an odd sentence is not necessarily meaningless , or incapable of conveying a message ; nor is it the case that such sentences never occur naturally .
3 Given the authoritative ‘ halo ’ effect that such tables evidently acquire , accurate reporting is a most basic requirement .
4 I feel myself shudder ; I have come to learn that such touchings normally precede a trip to the Dark .
5 But a report to Cleveland county councillors warns : ‘ There is a lack of substantive evidence to support the view that such projects significantly affect auto-crime . ’
6 ( It should be said that such views often gained the support of feminists , particularly outraged by the forcible use of the speculum under the Contagious Diseases Acts . )
7 The courts ruled that such companies only had the powers specifically granted to them by Parliament , and the ruling was extended to local authorities despite the fact that they were independently elected , not mere private corporations .
8 Soon it will forget that such orchards ever existed .
9 Together , these two concepts of ‘ closure ’ and ‘ reproduction ’ demand that we integrate our understanding of economic processes that allocate people to certain positions in a hierarchy with an understanding that such positions also depend on people 's perception of class , their sense of class culture , the culturally perceived ‘ pecking order ’ — the higher reaches of which are humorously caught by Les Dawson 's commentary that heads this chapter .
10 It is possible that such errors however , are merely indicative of the same craftsman 's readjustments .
11 There is no doubt that such contact now is particularly useful .
12 The CBI and other industrial representatives argued that such incentives already existed in the form of the employee 's salary , the training undergone at the firm 's expense , and the provision of a suitable working environment .
13 It does not seem possible that such women just were not able to have part-time work that would enable them to keep house for an elderly parent , and do their own thing as well .
14 C. Taylor and W. Page Faulk found that such women often have white cell antigens ( HLA ) that are unusually similar to those of their husbands .
15 Sterling issues expanded dramatically in the 1980s but increasingly in the form of eurosterling bonds and Table 3.8 shows the important share that such bonds now have in the total sterling bond market .
16 With stable macro policies of either a monetary or a fiscal kind , rational expectations on behalf of economic agents mean that such agents fully appreciate the signals that trigger government policy and the prescriptions that follow , internalizing this into their behaviour .
17 Anyone who has ever taken anti-histamines to relieve an allergy or the symptoms of hay fever will know that such tablets often cause drowsiness and a inability to think as clearly as usual .
18 Although current theories stressing the role played by stimulus consequence in latent inhibition are inadequate ( they are unable to deal with the role of context ) , there remains a set of empirical findings that such theories alone can accommodate — the various experiments ( see pp. 99–104 ) suggesting that the associability of a stimulus depends on its predictive accuracy .
19 I know from my work with homeless families that such people invariably need help late at night , in the early hours of the morning or at weekends , when it is especially difficult to find a general practitioner who will respond quickly to a call to see someone who has arrived on the doorstep — in my case that means the doorstep of the YMCAs for which I worked .
20 It is important to note that such courses only last for a MAXIMUM DURATION OF 12 MONTHS .
21 For , in addition to any ‘ genetic inheritance ’ , he noted that such individuals frequently suffered from an interlude in which motherly care was unavailable .
22 Yet this image , allowing for exaggeration , is not totally removed from the reality of prewar Japanese society , and the persistence of some of the same characteristics in the post-1945 period therefore means that such categorization still contains a measure of truth .
23 The work of Freud , and subsequent psychoanalysts , has indicated that when the pain of unexpressed feelings is not recognized or acknowledged , the subconscious mind ensures that such recognition never re-emerges at a conscious level , but it can nevertheless be a major subconscious influence on the social performance of the individual .
24 The question that such analysis then suggests is : why has Labour done so badly ?
25 I am saddened to find that such thinking still exists within the profession .
26 She had had no idea that such events still took place .
27 This finding conflicts with those of Bransford and Johnson ( 1972 ) and Dooling and Mullett ( 1973 ) who found that providing information about the theme or context of a passage after it had been presented did not improve performance , and so concluded that such information only affected the organisation carried out when the passage was memorised .
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