Example sentences of "therefore [be] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 What we observe in Belfast may therefore be the reflex of a raising rule that was originally ‘ metropolitan ’ or ‘ mainstream ’ , together with some admixture of Scots raising rules which account for Scots [ glΕs , kΕrt ] ‘ glass , cart ’ , and which are now partly superseded in Scots by lowering and backing rules .
2 Every held operation using tractors or horses inevitably causes some compaction and damage to soil structure ; it should therefore be the farmer 's aim to create the desired effect with the minimum of passes at exactly the right time .
3 Our fifth type must therefore be the traditionalist , for whom it is a pleasure to find the past living on in the present .
4 This will therefore be the position where , for example , the seller is in breach of one of the conditions as to description , merchantable quality or fitness for purpose , implied by the Sale of Goods Act , sections 13 and 14 .
5 The element of the image which suggests that as a matter of principled obligation all members of a group rushed to the aid of , say , an aggressive and irresponsible cattle-thief or rapist , may therefore be the product of the practical consideration that men related to an offender prudently assumed they would be held collectively responsible for his actions .
6 Since the standard molar free energies of formation of these are zero , the following condition must apply if these reactions are to occur spontaneously : The more stable oxide-that is , the oxide with the more negative value-must therefore be the product and not the reactant in both cases .
7 The effect on bile secretion seen after intracerebroventricular injection of neuropeptide Y in these studies may therefore be the result of neuropeptide Y binding to receptors that are responsible for releasing cephalic phase secretion .
8 The EV under these conditions would therefore be The EV of perfect information in this case is the difference
9 A sine qua non for language development might therefore be the emergence of ways of understanding the world which are amenable to expression in language .
10 The ‘ affective fallacy ’ , they maintain , is the fallacy of arguing , as Richards does , that poetry consists in the emotive use of language , and that the primary consideration of the critic must therefore be the effect that the poem has on the reader .
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