Example sentences of "it suggest that [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 This encouraged the BUY group as it suggested that metals , in minerals such as rocks , could indeed play an essential role in catalysing the formation of helium , presumably through fusion .
2 It suggested that countries should recover 60 per cent and recycle 40 per cent of each form of packaging material within five years of the directive becoming law , increasing to 90 per cent and 60 per cent respectively after ten years .
3 But when I asked him how much of the land of the state of Israel might potentially have two claimants — an Arab and a Jew holding respectively a British mandate and an Israeli deed to the same property — he said he figure was accurate — and it should be remembered that over half of Israel in 1948 consisted of the Negev desert — then it suggested that Arabs owned a far greater proportion of that part of Palestine which became Israel than has previously been imagined .
4 Among other things it suggested that teachers should be assessed on the clarity of their teaching objectives ; the quality of their notes , handouts , and visual aids ; qualitative assessments of their performance in lecturing , fieldwork , etc ; the volume and range of teaching they undertake ; the range of assessment techniques they use ; managerial responsibilities and innovative approaches that they take on ; and the number of invitations they receive as guest lecturers and speakers elsewhere .
5 It suggested that standards of recruitment and discipline appeared to be rather low and that there was a reluctance to scrutinise service delivery .
6 It suggests that matters of health should not be left entirely in the hands of the medical professionals , particularly if they share and perpetuate the dominant belief that good health is purely a ‘ mechanical ’ process which can be remedied by drugs and surgery .
7 Rather it suggests that women should be allowed to differentiate .
8 This approach is potentially useful since it suggests that women 's under-representation in public politics can be seen not simply in terms of women 's lack of interest in politics but of the ability of men to prevent women 's issues entering politics .
9 It suggests that teachers gather formal evidence which can be written work by the pupil but also encourage the collection of " ephemeral " evidence , i.e. evidence gained through observation , discussion or interaction .
10 It suggests that marketers need to offer products or services that offer satisfactions , or solve the consumer 's purchase problems , at a variety of levels at the same time .
11 On a practical and tactical level it suggests that groups with common aspirations should seek to engage in broadly-based political alliances to further their shared interests , through a combination of lobbying , pressure-group activity and litigation .
12 His argument has relevance for any set of historical circumstances , including the present day , in that it suggests that relationships between young adults and their parents , including patterns of reciprocal exchange between them , are closely related to the capacity of young people to earn a wage .
13 It suggests that licenses should be given to independent radio and TV stations which would encourage high professional and technical standards .
14 It suggests that injustices in this world may be rectified in the next .
15 It challenges some of the teaching methods that have been used in recent years and it suggests that schools should concentrate on commonsense , practical teaching .
16 The term representation is used here as it suggests that ideas are constructed rather than simply reflected upon or passively received .
17 Wrangham 's theory remains tentative but if it stands up to further investigation it suggests that humans were primordially partrilineal .
18 It suggests that children in these classes are better adjusted , more relaxed and resourceful than children in parallel English medium classes .
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