Example sentences of "[noun pl] it is " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In all types of contracts , particularly the last , definition of the risks it is intended to cover and the manner in which they will be allocated is of great importance .
2 Although the analysis of variance for the recoded risk information is slightly different from that for the all the potential risks it is clear from Figure 7.3 that with the exception of the medium risk exemplars the general pattern of results is very similar to that shown in Figure 7.2 .
3 This is potentially a glorious voice — one senses that instinctively — but to my ears it is at present just a voice , an instrument .
4 To my jaded ears it is a stupendous musical achievement .
5 The normal bass roll-off of -6dB by 38Hz is low enough to lend a convincing weight to the majority of signals and if the bass seems initially a little ‘ polite ’ to some ears it is only because it is tight , with little or no hangover — the dual coupled-cavity technique really does give a positive ‘ start and stop ’ throughout its range .
6 With animals it is different .
7 To be sure of finding plenty of animals it is best to collect rich , loose , moist soil from a well-cultivated garden-bed , or from a hedge-bank .
8 In herbivores it is the larvated egg which is passed out in the faeces but in other animals it is the hatched L1 .
9 By applying a sufficiently large number of probes it is possible to order the library into contigs of overlapping clones ( 3 ) .
10 If he makes a will , as most men do , it is almost certain that he will set apart a considerable proportion for the saying of masses ; if he should neglect to do so , and in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries it is regarded as almost a sin to die without making a will , the Church ought to make the provision which he has failed to make for his soul .
11 With the considerable degree of replanting in the last few centuries it is possible that the Weald now exhibits a more wooded aspect than at any time since the early medieval period .
12 In order to understand Clovis within the context of the late fifth and early sixth centuries it is necessary to emphasize the contemporary evidence , and to treat Gregory , as far as possible , as a secondary source .
13 By simply questioning informants it is difficult to get an accurate picture of where and when Creole is actually used at home .
14 A striking example of their dissociation is provided by the following exchange : on the one hand , Runciman takes it for granted that methodological individualism is ‘ now generally conceded to be almost trivially true ’ , while on the other Torrance asserts that ‘ In so far as methodological individualism is true it is trivial and irrelevant to sociology , while in so far as it is used to curb or dictate explanatory methods it is either incoherent or false ’ .
15 Of the two methods it is generally agreed that ‘ write black ’ is much better at fine lines and accurate reproduction of small typeface sizes while ‘ write white ’ is best for large areas of solid black .
16 Second , there are the cash resources available from the Training Agency , for those Compacts it is funding in Urban Programme Areas .
17 But for foreigners it is different , but they have to pay three times the Austrian fees .
18 Having discussed the parameters of the signals it is time to look at the detectors .
19 To its regular readers it is also renowned for its humorous In England Now column , introduced 50 years ago and now the subject of a new anthology .
20 While the research is primarily concerned with comprehension in fluent readers it is likely to have implications for certain forms of reading backwardness and for the development of Natural Language Understanding programs for computers .
21 Yeah , well , what but , but I 'm saying is it 's not the antibiotics it is n't the
22 Nevertheless , in organizations it is useful to note that there are both formal and informal groups .
23 In some organizations it is futile to try to implement an idea-handling procedure of any kind .
24 For such organizations it is a matter of balancing the demands for their services against the limited resources available .
25 In some organizations it is still seen as the junior partner to sales , in others it has an equal status , in yet others it has a superior status .
26 When considering their applicability to particular organizations it is necessary to heed Clegg and Dunkerley 's warning that we should not assume that power resources will have equal utility to the members of all organizations in all situations .
27 Answer guide : In manufacturing organizations it is extremely important that there is co-ordination between the sales and the production function .
28 In many districts it is impossible to distinguish exactly the contribution of winter-lets to homelessness , but they must add a considerable degree of uncertainty to housing demand in any given rural location , particularly in attractive holiday areas .
29 Despite the British Council 's regional offices it is essentially London-based and urban-orientated .
30 As mentioned above , where a firm which wishes to retain its own identity has increased the number of its branch offices it is sometimes difficult to retain an acceptable degree of harmony between the component parts of the firm and the partners attached to each part .
  Next page