Example sentences of "it argue that [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It argued that some extra form of local taxation was needed if local government was to preserve its separate identity .
2 It argued that more teachers should be encouraged into primary schools ( especially men , graduates and those who had specialised in maths or science ) , and a new group of staff called ‘ teachers ’ aides ' should be recruited with a similar status to nursery assistants [ never widely implemented ] .
3 It argued that these were not soft options but properly applied would be tough penalties which aided the battle to reduce crime .
4 It argued that public-sector resources were substantial , ‘ but efforts need to be pulled together more effectively , and brought to bear in the same place at the same time ’ ( ibid .
5 The Beveridge Report referred to both of these consequences when it argued that social security benefits should be of subsistence level only , allowing the individual , if he so wished , to make his own provision for higher benefits through voluntary insurance — which should also be positively encouraged by the government through tax allowances .
6 Now if th this side , the list on this side erm represents the sort of essential characteristics of a Marxist political party , and if that 's a reasonable er summary , and people might want to take issue with it argue that these are n't the essential characteristics , that there are other essential characteristics or one other important er characteristic which I 've ignored , but if these are , down this side , the essential characteristics of a Marxist party then Mao 's Communist Party in the late nineteen thirties can not , it seems to me , by any stretch of the imagination qualify .
7 It argues that each individual scheme so found gives to the law whatever of moral rightness it contains .
8 It argues that good packaging reduces other kinds of waste ( by preventing food from going bad or goods from getting broken in transit , for instance ) .
9 It argues that new housing is essential to boost labour mobility and maintain economic growth in areas where spiralling house prices are beginning to act as a disincentive to development .
10 It is not inconsistent with this interpretation that managerialist goals are sometimes pursued , but it argues that such conduct should be seen as aberrant behaviour , contrary to the dominant management culture .
11 It argues that major efforts to improve the health and education of poor people , coupled with family planning programmes , are necessary to reduce fertility rates and thus population size .
12 There are a number of different versions of this concept but essentially it argues that capitalist societies are tending towards a set of relationships between social groups and between these groups and the state .
13 The study is re- examining the national accounts measurement of government services ; it argues that most public servants in fact do things which can be measured and it provides some alternative estimates for real output growth in education , health and public administration ( which compares well with broadly analogous private financial services ) .
14 It argues that this way of describing legal practice shows that practice in its best light and therefore offers the most illuminating account of what lawyers and judges do .
15 It argues that this reflects the inherent character of the relationship between the public enterprise and the political controllers .
16 It argues that renewable energies are not developed enough for a higher goal , but if more money for research was made available , the future could be very different .
17 It argues that free market mechanisms can not resolve , or even erode , the North-South Divide and that positive national and regional planning is needed to ensure that it does not widen after 1993 .
18 It argues that voluntary measures such as the Department of Employment 's Making the Cash Flow initiative ‘ may require further legislation reinforcement ’ .
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