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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Why should the commission believe that advanced mousetrap manufacture , say , should be represented in at least two member states when one manufacturer might supply the whole of Europe with the products and thus could be better placed to export as well ?
2 I 'm not sure I could stand shlapping up and down to that bloody clinic time and time again .
3 That bloody fucker Mr Kipling pretending to whity he knew something about India !
4 do you know that bloody ginger cat , I 'm not kidding you
5 I just sat there on that bloody Sag Bag picking bits of Farley 's out of the corduroy and wishing it would open up and the polystyrene granules would swallow me !
6 Where 's that bloody pencil sharpener thing gone ?
7 He says I bought you that bloody dress ring ye bloody years back .
8 Do you mean that that bloody fool Hector McGillivray fobbed me off with a boat that 's — that 's been- ? ’
9 That bloody phone call !
10 That bloody bitch Sam had gone ahead knowing that Louise was coming round .
11 ‘ Apart from all that hoo-ha about that bloody fellow Trueman , ’ said Fagg .
12 Watch that bloody dustbin lorry come in here now !
13 precisely , I mean Prince , the Duchess of York goes to church and she lived in sin for ye years with that bloody racing driver so she 's , she 's nothing
14 Or is it that you 're worried about having to work a bit harder for the grand wages I give you … wages that 's been strangled out of me by that bloody woman o ’ yours ? ’
15 There 's enough in that bloody front lawn , I do n't know where ca about it !
16 Morpurgo precious near writing us both off in that bloody car crash .
17 Our Dawn told me he 's had to go and wait for that bloody pregnancy scan .
18 In a world of perfect certainty and perfect foresight the traditional view of the term structure is that long-run interest rates are simply averages of future short-term rates , so that : where denotes the ‘ one-period ’ rate , that is the market rate of interest at time t on bonds with one period to maturity ; and denotes the ‘ n-period ’ rate , that is the market interest rate at time t on bonds with n periods to maturity .
19 At the end , one of the least likely , a substitute , earned himself a fine , and that perennial problem child Moin Khan got a finger-wagging .
20 THE SOLUTION to that perennial trainer problem , what to do with the laces , may be nigh .
21 The Notts defence pulled absolutely all over the place and it it was the pace of coming up down that right hand touchline that did it .
22 It must however , be emphasised that these matters are not an end in themselves , but a means of enabling voluntary organisations to achieve their aims and objectives effectively , and I understand that that working party report will be published in February , and we all await it very much .
23 Such an analysis paralleled the belief that middle class women were more highly evolved and that working class women were nearer ‘ nature ’ and the lower animal passions and behaviour .
24 Like many I have supported this union 's policy my C L P , but also like many I have been hurt and angered by the attempts of some of the Party , both nationally and locally to deride and belittle the unions as a thing of the past and not relevant to the Party 's new media image and that working class issues were not worth presenting at elections because they are unpopular with the tabloids .
25 It was suggested that cultural differences would gradually be eroded also and that working class people would take on bourgeois , or middle class , lifestyles .
26 Always the same … that frightful woman shape Besets the dream-way and the soul 's escape .
27 Again in the recently published P P G six , paragraph forty six , it states that regional shopping centres may well have a role to play but usually only where the loss of greenbelt can be justified by the economic and social benefits of the scheme .
28 Er I 'd just like to come back on three fairly brief points that er one of which was mentioned by Michael Courcier , two of which er relate to that , and were helpfully stimulated in discussion during the tea break , erm Michael Courcier , I think if I got him right , said , he did say we ca n't produce demographic forecasts for post two thousand and six but I think he was fairly guarded in saying it it would n't be wise or or whatever , erm I would suggest in this context , and in the context of , and I use the word emerging and I look for advice as to when emerging regional planning guidance , and when will be the end date of that regional planning guidance , I say we should be looking beyond two thousand and six , I say we can look beyond two thousand and six , and I would suggest we do it in the way of arrange , which would be highly appropriate way of doing it , not too dissimilar to road traffic forecasts , low medium and high growth , and if , to put the point simplistically , if we have arrived at a requirement figure of nine seven for Greater York for a specific period , if we were to either project that forward by five or ten years , obviously we could n't just simply go rata , but if you took a low figure and you halved it on the basis of the make up , the demographic make up , of how the nine seven had been arrived at it would be possible to produce a range , that then relates to the question of a new settlement , and the alternatives during the period to two thousand and six , and beyond , of that new settlement , and I go back again to the greenbelt , it is vitally important to do that in the terms of a long term defined greenbelt , therefore again in that context , I would say it is highly desirable , if not necessary , to revisit the periphery of York , it has not been examined in a local plan , it has not been examined in terms of environmental impact , with all due respect to the Greater York working party their , the level of analysis of those peripheral blocks of land was fairly cursory , on a limited number of planning criteria , if a new settlement is to be assessed alongside expansion of Greater York we have to revisit it in much much greater detail .
29 Well you , you 're on that Regional Liaison Group in fact then
30 It was , therefore , not unexpected when Cooper and Culyer found in 1970 that regional hospital inequalities had persisted over the years and in some instances were in fact increasing .
  Next page