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

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1 It might be rash to conclude that all that represents a rejection of radicalism ; better , perhaps , to say that it is the sense of radicalism itself that changed .
2 Robbins ( 1963 ) presented dual-subject courses ( joint honours , combined studies , etc. ) as a variant on the single-subject pattern for those students who do not want such a specialized higher education , but that represents a university view , and a dated one at that .
3 That represents a growth rate of 1,000% !
4 That represents a growth of expenditure in those sectors of roughly 80 per cent .
5 As well as being the sort of motion that brings local government into disrepute , I also believe that this is the sort of motion that , that displays a lack of tolerance that should concern us all .
6 That made a total of six people trying to sell me something .
7 Now , I wonder if that made a difference .
8 That made a difference .
9 They maybe should have been booked for continuing to put the ball in the net … aswell as Lukic maybe not trying to save ( as if that made a difference ; - ) The Wallace incident at maine rd however is a different story .
10 The conventional method of recording orchestras was to place microphones throughout the ensemble ; Fine contended that given a hall with excellent acoustic properties , a single ultra-sensitive microphone should be capable of capturing the sound of a symphony orchestra with unprecedented clarity , balance and definition .
11 Well I think that when I said that I think that given a man and a woman of equal qualifications I was assuming that that had been taken into account .
12 My aim in this article is to show that given a relevance theoretic approach to utterance interpretation , it is possible to develop a better understanding of what some of these so-called apposition markers indicate .
13 She adds : ‘ That encourages a woman to be hopeful things will improve but , unfortunately , there is no way of knowing how he will react to anything . ’
14 If one were to do something that is statistically nonsensical — and when has that stopped a security analyst in his tracks ? — and make a sum of the percentage changes since the start , bookish securities have outperformed the UK market by 64% .
15 Apparently that drives a couple of bones into the brain .
16 If an individual works longer hours than he or she would wish to do in the absence of taxation , that involves a loss of welfare .
17 My Lord the reason I to make it clear is not er unnecessarily it 's just that to enable a police had tried to not show anything , well we 've got the documents here and we 're very happy to receive them .
18 The years were long , the company was colourful , and if the air was raw , well , did n't that lend a zest of danger to the enterprise ?
19 Letting all her breath out on an achingly shaky sigh , and telling herself firmly to pull herself together , that seeing a bride always made her feel weepy and was nothing whatever to do with Feargal , she walked along the landing to stare from the end window .
20 That got a bit hard to take .
21 With that goes a rejection of the corrupted language and thought of the old politics .
22 That goes a bit haywire then .
23 Held , dismissing the appeal , that to sustain a plea of autrefois convict a defendant had to prove not only that he had already been found guilty of the offence charged by a court of competent jurisdiction , either by the decision of the court or verdict of the jury or entry of his own plea of guilty , but also that the court had finally disposed of the case by passing sentence or making some other order ; that since the proceedings on the first indictment had been discontinued before sentence had been passed there had been no final adjudication and the defendant had properly been convicted on the second indictment ; but that , in all the circumstances , particularly having regard to the lapse of time between trial and determination of the appeal to the Judicial Committee , it would be appropriate for the death sentence to be commuted ( post , pp. 931D–E , 935H ) .
24 It is also a very effective method of escaping from an enemy — so explosive , so surprising , that catching a frog can be a difficult business , whether you are a human or a hungry bird or reptile .
25 Professor Williams , however , not only believes that rape should have a limited ambit because of the severity of the penalty , but that procuring a woman by threat should also be subject to limitations even though its maximum penalty is merely two years ' imprisonment .
26 ‘ They would need a bigger margin than that to mount a search down there at the bottom of the world .
27 That produced a form of waste that was hot , highly toxic , radioactive ; that will remain dangerous for hundreds of years and that no-one has yet thought of a way of disposing of ?
28 Obviously that constitutes a threat for the future .
29 Another serious offence is buggery ( intercourse per anum ) , but that constitutes a crime whether committed consensually or non-consensually , and it is the non-consensual form which ranks as a serious sexual assault .
30 Does that make a difference , or did he and others just start the ball rolling ?
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