Example sentences of "so that every [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Each ticket cost £30 , and only as many tickets were sold as there were items to be raffled , so that every ticketholder received a prize .
2 Soon it thickened to a great blanket , wrapping itself round the windows so that every candle in the place had to be lit .
3 So that every technician and every junior could hear him , Boll had enquired just how much longer before his present project would be completed , how much later than it was already .
4 Moreover , so that every user feels confident with the system , OCC provides a simple , intuitive user interface which facilitates access to applications and data regardless of where they exist in the enterprise .
5 The cinema was immediately adjacent to our house , so that every night we could hear the film and imagine what was on the screen .
6 The floor was made of wood which had been brushed with gold leaf so that every knot and line of the grain created a ripple in a seeming golden pool .
7 It had a wooden floor which had been brushed with gold leaf so that every knot and line of the grain created a ripple in a seeming golden pool .
8 A summary of the results of the survey , compared to the previous year 's findings , will be published with the annual demand for local income tax , so that every resident is able to tell what their council is achieving with the money they pay .
9 He saw a house , the house , almost the house a child draws in its infant school , four windows , chimney , door , garden path , lazy-daisy looped flowers in rectangular parterres , only this house was also a crudely three-dimensional flimsy box , barely containing something very large and very much alive , covered with rusty pelt , so that every aperture bulged with glowing fur , was pushed outwards , cracking , and a claw showed here on a sill , and a ripple of muscle there .
10 And yet Valerie Yule is proposing that the glorious rich language in which these activities are carried on should be vandalised so that every text we read will look like the worst that Fleet Street compositors can inflict on us .
11 Would my right hon. Friend feel able to lead a crusade with other European countries to put pressure on the Governments of central and south America so that every child there has a home , food , clothing and education and is not allowed to fall prey to the worst excesses of human nature ?
12 This can be avoided in the second model : Here pupils would begin at an agreed level and be guided through tasks with demands at each step increasing so that every child can positively achieve , i.e. reach their place on the ladder while the most able can continue to show their abilities beyond a fixed range .
13 Maybe I should have taken you to Calypso 's Cave , over on Gozo , ’ he added mockingly , running his hands down over her hips and closing the gap between them so that every hollow and curve came into contact with the steely wall of his legs and stomach , ‘ where the goddess Calypso managed to detain Ulysses for seven years … ’
14 The compression of the state pension down to income support levels has gone so far that it has superseded the income support level , so that every pensioner , as of right , should be on income support .
15 So an information-based business must be structured around goals that clearly state management 's performance expectations for the enterprise and for each part and specialist and around organized feedback that compares results with these performance expectations so that every member can exercise self-control .
16 And when it has been well washed and made clean , ye shall dry it well , and anoint it with this myrrh and balsam , from these golden caskets , from head to foot , so that every part shall be anointed , till none be left .
17 In the guitar plants , there 's an own-design computerised fret-insertion machine plus a robot which holds and twists guitar necks so that every part gets buffed equally — a job it can perform far more accurately than any luthier .
18 In the guitar plants , there 's an own-design computerised fret-insertion machine plus a robot which holds and twists guitar necks so that every part gets buffed equally — a job it can perform far more accurately than any luthier .
19 Additionally , barn conditions can be very static , so that every day is the same .
20 So what happened is that the literate women arranged their time so that every day they now have an hour set by to sit down with one of the illiterates and that 's how the literacy campaign is operating at the moment .
21 We can draw up a full list of patients so that every bed is filled every night .
22 We can draw up a full list of patients so that every bed is filled every night .
23 The carer has to be involved in this process , so that every time the patient washes his face , hands or body , you help and remind him to do so correctly , without increasing his spasticity or putting himself into danger through careless movements .
24 This program will make your non-laser printer operate just like a typewriter so that every time a key is pressed it is sent to the printer .
25 The entrepreneurial organization is both experience-based and decentralized , so that every advance builds on every previous advance , and everyone in the company has the opportunity and capacity to participate .
26 But no matter whether the ballet lasts one , two or three acts the choreographer must be fully in control of his material so that every detail of the characterisation of the whole cast is appropriate to the general atmosphere and environment within which the plot unfolds .
27 In fact , Groves had worked very closely with the leader , Simon Fischer , and the other sting principals of the RPO , so that every detail of the complex string accompaniment was finely balanced throughout , and such evident concern over fine detail was prevalent during the entire session .
28 If we are cunning , we can design the hierarchy so that every path at every level is just two or three steps long .
29 He is especially proud of his large collection of hunting birds , which occupies a substantial mews and tends to spill out into the palace itself , so that every room has at least one large bird of prey on its perch .
30 Briefly , his reply is that the key to the individuative power of spatial positions lies in the fact there there is only one all-embracing space , of which particular spaces , or places , are constituent parts ( so that every place is almost by definition unique ) .
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