Example sentences of "it is clear [that] the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Judging from the apparent reticence of many of our municipal galleries and mainstream critics in addressing work produced by women artists , it is clear that the time-honoured tradition of institutional myopia persists .
2 It is clear that the middle kingdom had strategic importance for a king who wished to preserve German unity ; that the Saxon kings had strong practical grounds for wishing to be kings of Lombardy and to hold suzerainty over the kingdom of Burgundy .
3 Mr Green added : ‘ It is clear that the middle ground in Derry favours the ideas put forward by Labour .
4 While each school must evolve its own way of working , it is clear that the traditional two-tier model has limited capacity to cope with change on the scale now being experienced .
5 It is clear that the latter found in her religious faith the strength necessary to undertake a public campaign on the taboo subjects of prostitution and venereal disease .
6 If we compare the traditional case with that of Modigliani and Miller with corporate taxes , it is clear that the latter position indicates a linear price decline while that of the traditional view suggests a more progressive decline .
7 A newsletter in 1964 complains that ‘ it is clear that the requested £10 per annum is more than one group can manage . ’
8 From documents that I have been sent by the senior chief inspector it is clear that the total number of inspectors will be used as follows : 11 will conduct high-profile surveys and focus inspections , six will inspect schools at risk and another 26 will undertake inspections to supplement database evidence .
9 ICC is the income consumption curve , and it is clear that the total provision of the good will increase as the local authority receives the grant .
10 But if loving parents freely admit that they would have chosen to let the child die if given the choice , it is clear that the vast majority of parents would take this view if given an option by the doctor concerned .
11 Granted what we know of the history of the city it is clear that the vast majority , as probably the similar multiplicity in many other English towns , were built between the tenth and the twelfth centuries , and that the multiplication of parish churches was especially characteristic of the eleventh century .
12 It is clear that the vast majority of people find faith gradually , rather than in a sudden conversion .
13 It is clear that the vast majority of older people are neither socially isolated nor overwhelmed with feelings of loneliness .
14 It is clear that the vast majority of full-time students entering higher education in the UK do so on the basis of Highers or A-levels ( 91% in the universities , 71% in the polytechnics , Smithers and Robinson , 1989 ) .
15 It is clear that the Central Wales Line still has much to offer , even with modern traction , much as we would all like to see BR allowing us the pleasure of an occasional steam run .
16 By ignoring these sorts of objections it is clear that the corporatist vision of the company is attempting to break with some of the basic assumptions of liberalism .
17 But it is clear that the mere existence of an alternative remedy does not oust judicial review .
18 By comparing the history of Northern Ireland with that of the rest of the United Kingdom it is clear that the mere fact of elections is not sufficient .
19 One hears jocular allusions to AIDS in circles which would class themselves sophisticated but from this programme , it is clear that the early theory that AIDS was some kind of divine blight on homosexuals , is already discounted .
20 This time it is clear that the new foundation was to the Viscount 's detriment and was expected to anger him .
21 From the complaints of British and French merchants it is clear that the colonial trade was ceasing to be a ‘ device by which was canalized , under royal control , the supply of goods from the rest of Europe ’ .
22 It is clear that the complex pattern of symptoms could not be a consequence of just one or two loci of damage within the normal reading system , and Morton and Patterson ( 1980 ) have offered an interpretation in which the disorder is explained as occurring when a number of different loci in the normal reading system are all damaged .
23 It is clear that the higher echelons at headquarters regarded Stirling and his men as very valuable , but were also alive to his impetuous nature .
24 She says , " it is clear that the various features of Patois are learned neither at random nor in isolation .
25 It is clear that the present system , perhaps indeed any system that could be devised , is not foolproof , says the IAEA .
26 But it is clear that the present ecology of the lake can not be sustained .
27 It is clear that the present arrangements will not survive .
28 It is clear that the bunched replacement of fixed capital requires a considerable growth in the rate of the production of fixed assets , but after a few years the need for such replacement will decline rapidly .
29 It is clear that the racial/religious dimension to parental choice of school is likely to become one of the dominant issues in education in the 1990s , making the preference versus policy dichotomy all the more difficult to resolve .
30 Comparing this with Fig. 7.1 , which illustrates the global distribution of desertification , it is clear that the two processes are often interrelated .
  Next page