Example sentences of "[be] [that] [prep] [adj] [noun] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It is useful to know what other models can do since microcomputers have a limited life and it may be that in five years time , the librarian and teachers will be involved in seeking a replacement for the existing microcomputer .
2 So you 've got these problems of balance , and it may be that in these situations Local Authorities have got to take a higher role in providing for their own people , as it were .
3 This means that several large microcomputer companies are designing computers which will run most IBM software and it may be that in ten years time , the problem of incompatibility will be lessened .
4 ( The main reasons for taking this approach is that for dynamic handwriting recognition it is necessary to select the correct information shortly after the word was written — it may not be possible to wait for the user to finish a sentence or clause . )
5 The fact is that for most children maths has been taught badly or rather they have learnt it badly for one reason or another , so there is a need for , for an improvement or a change , so the idea that if children can understand something this will help them to remember it or to make it more real to them , this does seem to be a shift over the last generation .
6 If there is some consolation for bankers amidst all this destruction of value , it is that for some eagles practice makes better , if not perfect .
7 However , the shame is that for some health service insiders it has become a way of life .
8 What they do have in common is that in all cases industry will be looking for the location where it can make the best profit .
9 The main point , however , is that in successful participant observation not only is the borderline blurred between covert and overt observation ; so also is the borderline blurred between covert and overt recording .
10 ‘ The significant fact ’ , he writes , ‘ is that in each county Dissent tended to be associated chiefly with certain forms of local society , while it was largely absent from others ’ .
11 Another distinction is that in reckless manslaughter recklessness as to physical injury is needed ; in gross negligence the criterion may be merely gross negligence as to health or welfare .
12 The problem , Dr Sagdeev points out , is that in some cases government ministries and departments still have control .
13 One relevant finding of Abrams ' research was that in successful neighbourhood care there were often central figures , key individuals , perceived as critical to the scheme .
14 It was just on , on appendix one , was that , was that in total department part of the care in the community in general , or was it hospital discharge , I was n't too clear on that ?
15 What they did not know was that in ten years time , that beautiful picture was to be blighted by Britain 's first commercial nuclear power station .
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