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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The result is that any notion of musical futurism has fallen into abeyance .
2 The result is that any case of cholera in the pits has an unusually favourable situation in which to spread . "
3 The result is that this sector of the industry now has a new generation of site distribution equipment to transport bulk food or plated meals , in equipment which suits its requirements , at sensible , serviceable and , most importantly , affordable prices .
4 The result is that this type of wave combs material down from the top of the beach giving a net erosive effect .
5 A basic principle of the rule of law is that any interference with the liberty of the individual must be justified by law .
6 This trend reflects a developing and successful specificity of probation practice : the pity is that this specificity of practice has not been complemented by a more appropriate specificity of language from the authors of the White Paper .
7 The point at issue is that both sets of disciplines tend to have different conceptions about the domain and status of proof in the pursuit of knowledge .
8 The likelihood is that any growth in 1992/93 will be modest , so that spending on unemployment will continue to rise and the growth in tax revenues will be weaker .
9 Broadly , apart from the incorporation of East Germany following German unification [ see p. 37659 ] , the Commission 's attitude was that any expansion of the EC 's membership could not be considered until after the implementation of the single internal market , scheduled for the end of 1992 .
10 The difference is that each piece of equipment incorporates special features to help the user , without highlighting any disability .
11 The danger is that this form of prosecution and monitoring becomes accepted by the parties of opposition as realistic .
12 The lesson of this period is that this type of legislation by itself , even when backed by executive exhortation , is insufficient to change sentencing outcomes ; and that unless sentencing discretion is restricted there is little hope of modifying sentencers ' own objectives in the pursuit of policy goals favoured by the executive ( Sabol , 1990 ) .
13 The basic premise is that this depletion of inositol will desensitize phosphoinositide signalling by slowing down the resynthesis of the PtdIns(4,5)P 2 precursor used to release InsP 3 .
14 But the truth is that these patterns of speech belong to convention and habit .
15 The truth is that some members of the Liverpool board had misgivings about the way Swansea were run and wondered if Toshack might have picked up bad habits .
16 The simple truth is that most captors of record fish were never heard of before their historical catch and have never been heard of since .
17 A second general point is that many offences of violence have consequences for the victim which extend well beyond any injury caused .
18 Reissland 's point is that any deterioration in the health of the soldiers , or any increase in the risk of their dying of cancer , will be missed if the survey compares their death rates with those in the general population , which is less healthy than soldiers .
19 The point is that this kind of overview is rarely possible by busy practitioners on the ground , working in parallel grooves but seldom in tandem , in social services , education , voluntary nurseries , playgroups , special needs assessment centres , units , nurseries .
20 The point is that some things in health services ca n't easily be looked at with quantitative methods alone .
21 Part of the alleged unfairness is that some plaintiffs in the United States courts will be denied the extensive discovery available to plaintiffs generally ; but that is to give absolutely no weight to the specifically international aspects present in particular cases .
22 The key point was that this population of captive bats was a mixture of two separate groups , taken from caves many miles apart .
23 Because the truth was that this evidence of care and tenderness was harder to bear than any neglect , for it threw into question the whole basis of their lives together .
24 The thinking behind the requirement that a statutory statement of terms should include a note dealing with the in-house grievance procedure is that many hiccups in the working relationship are best cured through level-headed discussion .
25 Mr Roger Lankester , the party 's pollution specialist , said : ‘ My biggest criticism is that each part of the bill appears to have a loophole or get-out clause which will render much of it unenforceable . ’
26 If the first caveat is that these processes are at a relatively embryonic state , the second caveat is that such movements towards greater institutional self-reflection are liable to be arbitrarily arrested by external pressures .
27 The success of these individual desires not withstanding , general belief is that some form of compromise is most likely .
28 Basically his argument is that all aspects of musical form — Adorno instances overall structure ( the thirty-two-bar chorus ) , melodic range , song-types and harmonic progressions — depend on pre-existing formulae and norms , which have the status virtually of rules , are familiar to listeners and hence are entirely predictable .
29 The second argument is that many structures of appropriation of surpluses from peasantries and pastoralists which were established during the late colonial period still exist .
30 This is closely related to the more general idea of a common association base ( CAB ) : the argument is that some sort of conceptual link has to be formed between individuals which have been introduced if they are to be referred to by a plural pronoun .
  Next page