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

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31 They suggest that social classes have been replaced by a continuous hierarchy of unequal positions .
32 They suggest that public expenditure growth has led to a transfer of productive resources from the private sector to a public sector producing largely non-marketed output , and that this has been a major factor in the UK 's poor performance in the post-war period .
33 Following Lea ( 1984 ) , they suggest that true conceptual categories involve equivalence classes of stimuli that are not tied together by perceptual similarity , Mediated generalization is clearly not to be regarded , according to this view , as making the stimuli perceptually more similar .
34 They suggest that clinical psychologists , with an understanding of psychological aspects of disability , may have a role to play in the development of services for older people with disabilities , and in training other health service professionals in how to respond to problems of disability in older people .
35 They suggested that constitutional change was something that most Scottish electors might , when invited , approve of .
36 They suggested that dietary phosphate inhibits this protective effect of calcium , because phosphate will also bind luminal calcium ions and thus reduce the amount of calcium available for fatty acid and bile acid precipitation .
37 He suggests that gradual movements in share prices caused by insider dealing are preferable to the erratic jumps in prices brought about by enforced disclosure .
38 CAN ANYBODY be expected to take the Deputy Director of Wirral Social Services seriously when he suggests that feeding curry to toddlers will help them counteract the evils of racism ?
39 He suggests that professional authority has three elements :
40 Moreover , far from generating isolation and introversion , he suggests that suburban living generates neighbour-liness , co-operation and collective action :
41 He suggests that climatic variations almost certainly influence personal behaviour and that specific types of weather can cause an increase in anti-social behaviour in many groups , ranging from schoolchildren causing havoc in the classroom to outbreaks of violence among those taking part in mass demonstrations .
42 For he suggests that parliamentary democracy is an egalitarian way of deciding certain policy issues , such as what the criminal laws of a community should be ( Dworkin , 1978a , p. 258 ) , and elsewhere , in respect of a more restricted class of ( moral ) policy issues , he has this to say : ‘ Under certain circumstances that issue should be left to democratic institutions to decide , not because a legislature or parliament will necessarily be correct , but because that is a fair way , in these circumstances , to decide moral issues about which reasonable and fair people disagree ’ ( Dworkin , 1981 , p. 208 ) .
43 He suggested that new species arise , not in the main centre of its ancestors , but in peripheral , somewhat isolated populations .
44 He suggested that Labour governments came to power only when there had been a radical change in the climate of opinion .
45 He suggested that extinct crocodiles found in the fossil record could have been transformed into their modern relatives when a modification of the environment triggered off the transition to a new growth pattern .
46 He suggested that tidal forces resulted in the lighter continental crust ‘ ploughing ’ through the substratum of denser crust underlaying the oceans .
47 He suggested that ethical committees could be set up across the country to provide an independent source of advice for doctors and families , taking the matter out of the hands of the courts .
48 He suggested that growing economic and political disparities between the northern and southern Mediterranean , combined with the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in the south and racism in the north , had generated sources of potential conflict .
49 Moreover , it suggested that foster parents who had had the care of a child for five years or more should be able to apply for an adoption order without risk of removal by parents before a hearing .
50 It suggested that primary education could be reorganised into first and middle schools .
51 The work reported on in section 3.3 suggested that there may be economic efficiency ( as well as taxation efficiency ) reasons for the introduction of share options , and in general it suggested that managerial emolument packages should not be in the form of a straight salary but should involve some performance-improving subtleties .
52 This has not been done in the interests of achieving a restrictively formalist , text-immanent reading of the story , nor is it suggested that contextual detail does not have a part to play in a multidimensional , interpretative process .
53 If so , it suggests that liberal policies will be implemented in Peru at least for a few months this year , whatever the general public thinks .
54 This is interesting both because it suggests that non-Hebbian forms of potentiation occur in the hippocampus , and because it provides implicit evidence for the existence of a diffusible extracellular messenger ( see text ) .
55 The first reported expression of dissent occurred in Balston Ltd v Headline Filters [ 1987 ] FSR 330 where Scott J at pp347 and 348 said , having quoted from the judgment of Neill LJ in Faccenda , both counsel before me express some reservations about that passage insofar as it suggests that confidential information can not be protected by a suitably worded restrictive convenant binding on an ex-employee unless the information can be regarded as trade secret in the third of the categories described by Goulding J. I am bound to say that I share these reservations .
56 It suggests that pragmatic theory as a whole should be based on the notion of context change ( see some applications in Chapters 4 and 5 below ) .
57 It suggests that huge amounts of extra money could be made available for the homeless , improving the condition of houses and tackling the growing shortage of affordable homes for rent if local housing companies were created .
58 If this is the case , then it suggests that remarkable similarites exist between the vertebrate smooth muscle ( 9 ) and nonmuscle MHC genes ( 11,21 ) in terms of their ability to generate isoform diversity by the mechanism of alternative splicing .
59 The coat-of-paint approach is doubly mistaken because it suggests that fundamental issues of social justice , democracy and political and economic power are not raised by the struggle against racial subordination .
60 The rhetorical approach links the processes of thinking to those of argumentation , for it suggests that deliberative thought is internalized argumentation .
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