Example sentences of "that [art] wider [noun] " in BNC.

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1 As a consequence , it is often argued that there is a greater need for additional performance measures , and that these measures should be more detailed in non-profit organizations ; in other words , that the wider accountability questions are more immediate and important .
2 felt that the wider problem of possible changes in the Institute should be addressed to determine where it was going .
3 By the last decade of the eighteenth century there is evidence that the wider powers of the Church , even in rural England , were weakening rather than enhancing its spiritual authority .
4 Taking a series of views across the whole situation , referred to as the hill tops approach by Mcloughlin and Brown , recognises that the wider system could be instrumental in :
5 In addition he seeks covenants to ensure that surrounding parkland remains as pasture so that the wider country house landscape is assured protection .
6 The HNC incorporates work-based assessment and , when MCI Diploma guidelines are published , a similar development is planned so that the wider competence base of the Diplomas can be used to support middle or functional managers .
7 Even so , Sir Matthew admitted that the wider implications of the weak housing market on the industry were hard to quantify .
8 I am sure that the wider world think of us as all being terribly left wing , whereas in fact we 're awfully liberal and conservative and with a spectrum distribution of political allegiances which I suspect are very little different from the community as a whole .
9 We can not contain it and still expect that the wider health of freedom of expression may be unaffected .
10 Where the subject is in danger of losing his liberty it is desirable that the wider terms of section 23(1) of the Act of 1968 should by analogy be applied .
11 The success of two trial Training Courses held in June and October at Birmingham and York confirmed the belief that the wider demands being placed on the Honorary Welfare Officers meant that some formal training was essential .
12 There was a feeling that the wider issues needed to be looked at in a national forum .
13 That is all the more reason , they believe , for keeping their crusade going , so that a wider public will react positively and begin to recognise the indicators of abuse .
14 It means that a wider range of goods is often available , and retailers are more likely to introduce special offers and price reductions to attract custom away from their competitors .
15 In addition , the inclusion of academics from a broad range of subjects or chosen for particular expertise ( in student learning , for example ) means that a wider range of critical questions are more likely to be explored .
16 Most students start with vague objectives or change direction quite fundamentally during their first year so that a wider range of courses is required including some broadly-based and some of a more specialized nature .
17 We say that a wider Europe must be a more democratic Europe .
18 As we have seen , it appears that , despite his own obsessions , Hitler was politically aware from an early date — perhaps as early as 1923 — that a wider currency than anti-Semitism was needed to distinguish the NSDAP from the purely sectarian politics of other völkisch groups , to extend the Party 's appeal , and to make a serious bid for power .
19 Some people thought that a wider look at the problem may provide some answers .
20 Erm the editors say that , and I rely upon this because it 's important in my submission , that it is submitted that a wider view might be taken as the function of a solicitor as expert witnesses .
21 On the other hand , it will be argued that the large number of arrests points to a malaise of such dimensions that it can not completely be dealt with by a police investigation and that a wider inquiry is called for .
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