Example sentences of "[pron] [is] [verb] that some [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Managing director Albero Sandoval places the potential market at 100,000 users , predicting that this will rise to 600,000 subscribers over the next 10 years , of which it is hoped that some 300,000 will use Sistelcom 's system . |
2 | It is hoped that some 6,000 organisations could eventually benefit from involvement with the project . |
3 | It is accepted that some 10 to 15 per cent of cases are seen outside the clinics by private or general practitioners , and it is unusual for these cases to be reported to the Department of Health . |
4 | There might be more advantage in making the categories run mid-way across the ten-year groups , giving 25–34 as a group if it is felt that some significant changes take place in people 's lives in their mid-thirties , or at other points in the mid-sections of the decades . |
5 | In the city of Rome it is believed that some 40,000 insulae lined the streets and squares . |
6 | In this brutal war , it is estimated that some 60,000 civilians were killed up to 1989 , before the 1989 to 1990 round of fighting which is thought to have claimed over a thousand lives . |
7 | Now it is estimated that some 38 per cent of people are literate — but the figure for women is only 22 per cent . |
8 | It is estimated that some 30 per cent of the overhead and marketing budget represents the cost of production and distribution of brochures . |
9 | For example , though it is known that some 80 per cent of pedestrian fatalities in Britain occur on built-up roads , statistics are not available separately for residential areas . |
10 | These awful conditions naturally made it quite impossible to tell what was happening actually on Krakatoa , but it is thought that some milder explosive activity continued . |
11 | In the United States it is reported that some 35 million heart attacks and strokes occur each year . |
12 | For the present we may note that every person is considered to start life with a ‘ domicile or origin ’ , which will be , as a rule , the domicile of his father at the time of his birth ; and that this domicile of origin continues until it is shown that some other domicile has been acquired , and is restored whenever an acquired domicile is lost without the acquisition of another . |