Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] suggest that " in BNC.

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1 It is wholly wrong to suggest that it is the European Community alone which has difficulties with the agriculture dossier .
2 It 's not entirely fanciful to suggest that the Church of England is a kind of conglomerate .
3 The facts of political geography are alone sufficient to suggest that there might be many occasions when the Duke of Aquitaine found himself at odds with the Taillefers and the Lusignans .
4 My Lords , as only one thousand of the twenty four thousand schools er have opted out during five years of this does not that suggest that the schools themselves and the governors and the parents to whom the Minister refers , are not convinced of the advantages and in those circumstances was she given absolute guarantee that no opt- out will be allowed without a ballot ?
5 But does not this suggest that we have only to learn the same lesson over again ?
6 Moreover , the duration of diabetes and the age distribution for both groups were broadly similar suggesting that no participation bias had occurred .
7 This is not supposed to suggest that events can not be said to occur straightforwardly in the real but rather that when set up in any series , narrative , or history they are constructed as such events retrospectively by the historian .
8 It is not reasonable to suggest that hooliganism is merely inflated by the press and best treated by ‘ radical non-intervention ’ .
9 As shape and energy are interchangeable in biological systems , and as all biological reactions are shape-specific , it is not unreasonable to suggest that shape-specific water polymers are the basis of the activity of homoeopathic potencies .
10 Because prosecution is a last resort it is not unreasonable to suggest that the offe
11 ‘ With these rent levels , it is not unreasonable to suggest that companies in the South-East who are considering relocation are now thinking again , ’ said Mr Stringer .
12 ‘ It is not necessary to suggest that there will be conscious unfairness ; but it is , I submit , possible that such judges will , particularly in cases where the liberty of the subject is concerned , find themselves unconsciously biased through over-appreciation of executive difficulty …
13 ‘ There has been much talk that Rangers have the title sewn up but we still have 58 points to play for and that makes it ludicrously premature to suggest that the destination of the title is cut and dried , ’ said Brady .
14 This evidence is not sufficient to suggest that low rates of sudden deaths in Bangladeshi infants are achieved at the expense of high neonatal mortality .
15 It is thus tempting to suggest that the same X-box binding complex may act both as an activator and as a repressor .
16 It is not silly to suggest that we should consider those aspects .
17 It is not realistic to suggest that any meaning is possible .
18 He said : ‘ It is totally wrong to suggest that up to 90pc of all equipment in special baby care units is provided by charity .
19 Compared with younger age groups , older people are much more likely to suggest that improved prosperity has brought about improved health , while younger people are more convinced of the importance of health education .
20 It seems much more reasonable to suggest that the speaker is indicating a readiness to be friendly and to talk .
21 It would be absurdly sanguine to suggest that the latter half of the twentieth century has witnessed any global movement in the direction of democracy or popular power .
22 You are also right to suggest that I would not like to part with all of this .
23 This appears to be an interpolation , and Krueger is probably right to suggest that the original had per damnationem legati .
24 It is probably pointless to suggest that Mr Brittlebank now seek ( not seeks ) the guidance on English usage so clearly denied him hitherto , but I hope he will think twice before presuming upon your columns on this particular subject in future .
25 It would be grossly unfair to suggest that it can not be used by anyone else , but the degree of achievement attained by such users will be limited
26 It is clearly ridiculous to suggest that effective research can be carried out only in the absence of an adult experimenter .
27 Yet it is probably fair to suggest that few people could have been immune from the implications of the party struggle at Westminster , since decisions taken by the central government often had a direct affect on ordinary people 's lives , and few people could have avoided being exposed to the political controversies of the day through the various media of propaganda .
28 In the present state of research it is probably fair to suggest that although influence did have a powerful impact on the outcome of a number of elections , on the whole the electorate was not particularly easy to control , and that members of the political elite , despite all their efforts , often failed to achieve their ends .
29 It is also fair to suggest that the Labour Party benefited from the rising unemployment of the 1920s for it claimed , successfully in the 1920s , that although it could not solve unemployment , which was a product of a capitalist society , it would at least ensure that the unemployed were guaranteed a level of benefits which would ensure healthy life .
30 DNAaseI and copper phenanthroline footprints of both proteins are now separate suggesting that CRP and the truncated RNA polymerase do not share any significant contact on the DNA .
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