Example sentences of "[noun prp] suggest that [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Roberts suggests that in his own way he 's as obsessed as the people he 's observing .
2 Finally , Portes suggests that in the struggle , the groups rarely come into direct confrontation with the dominant class , but usually with members of the bureaucratic-technical class who staff the agencies of the state ( Portes 1985 ) .
3 Reworking of her indices by Deane and Cole suggests that between the quinquennium 1750 – 4 to 1785 – 9 money wage rises in the South varied between less than 4 per cent for London labourers and 19.4 per cent for those of Kent , whereas in Lancashire labourers gained 64 per cent and craftsmen 40.5 per cent over the period .
4 Pete suggested that in a few days ' time he could take her out to the nearest big town on the coast , and there she could look for clothes in the department stores and check out the library for the addresses of any useful organisations or people to contact .
5 Barth suggests that in pointing to the delusional nature of ideology he is indulging in an idolatry of science characteristic of his time but equally delusional ( Barth 1977 : 110 ) .
6 It also held East Indian bonds , and the fact that it gave substantial mortgages on land has led Dickson to suggest that to an extent it was diverting funds derived from industry and trade towards the landed interest .
7 For example , Sperber and Wilson suggest that in [ 25 ] it would be consistent with the principle of relevance to assume that the speaker wanted to indicate that the walk was longer than the hearer would have otherwise thought .
8 The meeting was arranged for ten o'clock ; in their anxiety , they arrived twenty minutes early , and Ernest suggested that for politeness ' sake they should walk up White Horse Lane and back , to kill time .
9 Mackinnon suggests that by advertising his own aggression and bad temper the patriarch may be spoiling his own chances of further reproductive activity but his display also ruins the chances of his male neighbours .
10 In Lambert v. Lewis ( 1981 H.L. ) Lord Diplock suggested that in that case someone down the chain of distribution who suffers economic loss ( i.e. because he has to pay out damages for breach of contract ) , might well be able to claim indemnity direct from the negligent manufacturer under the principle in Donoghue v. Stevenson .
11 While stressing that they both take their point of departure from Marx , Lévi-Strauss suggests that for him Marxism implies that
12 Lévi-Strauss suggests that as a science anthropology should be attempting not to provide a definition of man as he is known experientially in our own society — an unscientific subjectivism — but should rather begin by ‘ dissolving ’ him .
13 The quote from Hammond & Waterton suggests that in 1890 it was thought that a barrister umpire could preside over a valuation : to restate the proposition in modern terms , a lawyer can act as an expert .
14 Recent developments in Australia suggest that in some respects that country is further along the road than Britain in formulating a policy response to the obvious inequalities found there .
15 Liddell suggested that in addition to Pavlov 's , what-is-it ? , reflex , the presentation of a novel stimulus will also evoke a ‘ what-happens-next ? ’ reflex .
16 Van den Boogard suggested that in the Anglo-Norman fabliaux the author assumes what he calles the persona of the clerk , i.e. a character looking for respect and admiration for his ability to tell a fascinating tale of intrigue ( inter alia ) , whereas a French author is more likely to adopt the persona of the jongleur , shocking by his anarchism but amusing at the same time through his self-mockery .
17 Crompton and Jones suggest that in the future it will not necessarily be the case that male clerks will be able to enjoy so much upward mobility .
18 The BCS suggested that in fact the prospect of suffering from sexual assault , robbery or burglary was unlikely when considering the country as a whole .
19 Alan Farmer suggested that with a vivid feature film , children should be allowed to watch it through without a single interruption .
20 Green suggested that within this city the window tax should not apply .
21 John Sutphen suggests that with the three sonar channels available to dolphins , cetaceans can see-read-hear into each others ' hearts and brains .
22 Given that the land had been distributed to the peasants , Bukharin suggested that without the intervention of the state , that is , the proletarian state , the scene would be set for a ‘ new American-style cycle ’ , by which he meant the development of capitalist commodity production in agriculture with a process of centralisation taking place and the development of agri-factories .
23 Johns suggests that in both English and Brazilian academic papers , the indicative/informative distinction correlates with the choice of tense : the present tense is used for indicative and the past tense for informative statements .
24 So Norris suggests that in a Bottle-nosed dolphin the sonar clicks are produced just below the level of this blow-hole .
25 Rowel suggested that during the tour opposition players had breached the fine line between rucking and stamping .
26 Taylor suggests that in more than 50% of cases of acute H pylori infection , hypochlorhydria lasts for several weeks .
27 DEC suggests that in the second generation , workstations from Sun Microsystems Inc , Hewlett-Packard Co , IBM and Silicon Graphics Inc might all be included in the clusters , which suggests that the Open Software Foundation 's Distributed Computing Environment will play an important role .
28 Indeed , Willig suggests that by modifying the structure so as to ensure that HJKL is substantially greater than FEHG , the price p , can be lowered slightly .
29 In the same way , Fanon suggests that at the political level the so-called ‘ Third World ’ constitutes the disruptive term for the European political dialectic of capitalism and socialism .
30 But Evans suggests that on some newspapers speed is valued more than polish and on a busy evening a deskman will find stories arriving faster than he can edit them .
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