Example sentences of "be [vb pp] that [art] whole [noun] " in BNC.

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1 However , it has to be recognized that the whole concept of conservation areas would never have become established in many places without a willingness by local authorities to accept development behind facades .
2 In later years the events of 5 October were to be polished into simplified and incompatible propaganda versions ; it has to be stressed that the whole affair was a series of blunders and the violence resulted from a breakdown of control by the leaders of the march and the controllers of the police , and not from any pre-existing plan .
3 It could be argued that the whole idea of " normal " hours is inappropriate when applied to out-workers , for it was not so much in the length of the factory day but in its regularity that there was a real contrast with the weaver 's cottage .
4 However , if you hate exercise , be assured that the whole enterprise is not necessarily doomed to failure .
5 The right hon. Gentleman can be assured that the whole aid community is firmly behind those principles .
6 At one time only a few selected diseases were thought to have links with the sufferer 's state of mind , but now it is recognized that a whole range — from cancer to heart attack — may be brought on by worry and strain .
7 Although the new forms of service are not necessarily responsible , it is felt that the whole ethos of worship has changed .
8 It is planned that the whole collection up to the Middle Ages will be moved to the Stuttgart exhibition centre , leaving a space of approximately 6000 square metres for the city 's rich medieval remains .
9 It takes a few moments to adjust — one moment one is dry , wearing dry swimming trunks and walking about , and the next one is progressively getting wetter ( including the swimming trunks , which somehow seems particularly inappropriate ) — and it 's only when half a length or so has been swum that the whole thing seems ordinary again .
10 During lunch an announcement was made that the whole school should go into the Assembly Hall and be seated as soon as the meal was over .
11 Without taking away from the association 's present main activities in forming international teams and organising international events — mirrored by the clubs ' heavy orientation towards racing — it was agreed that the whole base of the sport needed widening .
12 At the trial of the issue before Cave J. it was proved that the whole sum of £2,090 19S. had been paid by instalments , but the respondent claimed interest .
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