Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] [conj] this [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 In other departments the approach to assessment was deliberately kept as informal and flexible as possible , as in the following extended quotation from the Head of Drama at ‘ Pope John Paul ’ , which illustrates that this type of apparent informality can be just as thorough and searching , if not more so , than many supposedly more objective methods :
2 She argues that this perception of discontinuity and dominance has consequences for the way experience finds expression in the work of male philosophers .
3 On closer inspection one sees that this interpretation of ‘ want ’ misplaces the centre of imperative force in the child 's situation .
4 Although he concedes that this kind of research is sometimes necessary , he deplores the tendency to regard it as the norm .
5 JUST when you may been ready to despair , it seems that this country of ours may have found something of its heart , or perhaps its soul .
6 For as well as suggesting that if we were to give up the view that most actions are autonomous we should have to give up a great deal else as well , it asserts that this transformation of our attitudes is actually beyond us .
7 From their views on the intentional and affective fallacies ( Brooks seems to have agreed entirely with Wimsatt and Beardsley about these ) it follows that this reconciliation of opposites must be seen not as an event in the mind of the author or reader , but as an objective fact about the text 's meaning or structure .
8 It follows that this quest for reassurance will cause her to seek out situations in which some sort of official sanction will be given to her change .
9 It means that this type of analysis lights upon a particular aspect of social life and social change ( and an aspect of life with which Chicagoans were immediately concerned in the 1920s ) without attending to what Castells or a structuralist Marxist would see as the principal underlying processes affecting people 's lives , especially economic processes and those related to the social relations of production .
10 He suggests that this conception of the state , together with the emergence of Rationalism in politics , has subverted the moral integrity of civil association .
11 It argues that this way of describing legal practice shows that practice in its best light and therefore offers the most illuminating account of what lawyers and judges do .
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