Example sentences of "it [be] clear [conj] this [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Lord Mayor it is clear that this country can not sustain the present numbers of applicants seeking asylum .
2 Lord Mayor , it is clear that this country can not sustain the present numbers of applicants seeking asylum .
3 It is clear that this change is highly evaluated in Belfast in terms of social class hierarchy and status , as it is the more prestigious groups that tend to adopt it and the more ‘ advanced ’ ( generally female and younger ) group who introduce it to the conservative inner-city communities ( which are characterized by dense and multiplex network ties that tend to resist innovation and maintain conservative forms ) .
4 Since the Crown could not afford an absolute loss of revenue , it is clear that this expansion of the waste had to be at the expense of society .
5 Although judges sometimes loosely talk of material which is " inherently obscene " or " obscene per se " , it is clear that this concept is irreconcilable with the legislative definition of obscenity .
6 It is clear that this increase of interest in health and fitness is becoming increasingly important in determining the choice of hotel .
7 It is clear that this kind of INSET provision could have been much more effective if the membership of each course had been carefully targeted and hence more homogeneous ; many of the teachers who attended would have been better served by a simpler , more sharply focused presentation of recommendations specifically relevant to their own current practice .
8 It is clear that this position creates difficulties when operating in the context of community development .
9 From the very first entry at the top of the list it is clear that this discussion was to be for Darwin revelatory .
10 If the remedies provided in England were of universal application then it is clear that this appeal would not have been before your Lordships .
11 It is clear that this signal is the same in all higher vertebrates ; what has changed in evolution is the response .
12 It is clear that this impression made upon us is no less significant in determining our conception of the individuals concerned than the articulate self-expression represented by the conversation we may be engaged in within this setting .
13 Nowadays it is clear that this distinction is illusory ; scientific applications of computers often require character string manipulation and need many of the transput facilities of business data-processing , while business applications increasingly need sophisticated arithmetic calculation .
14 In 1963 the hundred largest UK enterprises controlled on average only 40 plants each within the UK : by 1972 this had increased to 72 , and it is clear that this period of domestic expansion and takeovers was also the main period of international expansion by TNCs .
15 Even if we admit that an element of calculation usually enters into racist practices , rather than blind hatred , it is clear that this model ignores the deeper reaches of the racist imagination , the structures of feeling and phantasy which are embedded in even the most rationalized forms of racist argument and action .
16 His nationalisation and fury at British exploitation made it impossible for him to compromise even if it was clear that this policies were self-destructive .
17 It was clear that this knowledge was distressing her .
18 In the fifth week the original baseline condition ( no intervention ) was applied for two nights only because it was clear that this problem had virtually disappeared .
19 This point was not argued any further but afterwards it was clear that this teacher was not satisfied with the response .
  Next page