Example sentences of "and [noun prp] [vb base] that [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | In the case of a claim for bereavement in the Zeebrugge ferry disaster , Pannone and Napier explain that anomalous situations arise from the Administration of Justice Act 1982 , for example : |
2 | Again , Thompson and Spencer suggest that intense stimuli habituate only slowly but there is some evidence that they might acquire latent inhibition especially readily , ( Crowell and Anderson 1972 ; Lantz 1976 ; Schnur and Lubow 1976 ) . |
3 | The governments in Tunis , Algiers and Rabat fear that new frustrations will inflame their countries ' economic problems . |
4 | The researches into medical education going on at places like Southampton and Dundee confirm that smaller adjustments to medical courses can have useful effects on how students learn . |
5 | Perhaps more important still , each half of the series has a large five-note group in the zones of B and F. Note that these zones , being a tritone apart , are tonally as far apart as is possible . |
6 | Roll and Ross argue that these portfolios may have desirable qualities for the potential investor . |
7 | Despite the potential for exploiting volunteers , Baldock and Ungerson argue that such schemes may provide the basis for a shift from unpaid to paid care-work . |
8 | Fleay and Sanders feel that this committee achieved remarkably little , placing no significant pressure on the National government to drop its policy of non-intervention . |
9 | Gemmill and Dickens argue that such tests examine both the validity of the model and the efficiency of the TOM and that they would have the following implications : |
10 | Thieblot and Haggard emphasise that these observations are made only on the basis of ‘ preliminary analysis ’ and do not offer any empirical validation . |
11 | During the early sixties Butler and Stokes argue that social services was an issue that satisfied the three conditions ; its effect was " substantial " ; and it " worked strongly to Labour 's advantage " — although their evidence for all of this was weak . |
12 | And Prodrive reckon that one day we might all be driving around with semi-automatic gear boxes just like Colin McRae … on second thoughts , perhaps not just like Colin McRae . |
13 | Studies in the UK , USA , France , New Zealand , and China indicate that irritable bowel syndrome ( IBS ) is present in 11–14% of adults . |
14 | The hardest lesson learned from such an exercise is that the emergency services from Oxfordshire , Gloucestershire and Warwickshire believe that one day they will combione again , to deal with the real thing … what emergency planners call the nightmare scenario . |
15 | Both Smith and Goodman believe that skilled adult reading is far from error-free , and that errors can be a positive sign that the sense of the text has been grasped . |
16 | Modigliani and Miller argue that this situation can not persist for long as it offers arbitrage profits to the individual investor . |
17 | Davis and Moore argue that all societies need some mechanism for insuring effective role allocation and performance . |
18 | Thus Davis and Moore conclude that social stratification is a ‘ device by which societies insure that the most important positions are conscientiously filled by the most qualified persons ’ . |
19 | Davis and Moore realize that one difficulty with their theory is to show clearly which positions are functionally most important . |
20 | Although these classifications and their spatial patterns tend to confirm the generally accepted view of rural population already discussed here and in Chapter 4 , Webber and Craig admit that multivariate classification is a subject on which virtually no two practitioners agree either in the UK or in other countries like France ( Chapius , 1973 ) and therefore argue that the crucial test should not be the methodology but whether the classifications are useful . |
21 | The PIMS data still give some cause for puzzlement over the question of investment intensity , however , because Buzzell and Gale show that five-year averages of ROI are highly positively related to increases in the long-term value of the business , both being closely and positively associated with initial competitive position . |
22 | Again , the ethnographic examples of Semai , Chewong , and Piaroa demonstrate that indigenous views regarding emotional and behavioural differences in men and women need not necessarily be conceptualized . |
23 | Even big insurers like Hartford and Cigna admit that these practices give the industry a bad name . |
24 | Wimmer and Perner argue that this ability involves the ability to represent the relationship between two conflicting beliefs . |
25 | Durant and Fabb claim that Literary studies in action is a pedagogical tool which can be used either by individual students or groups of students working in isolation , or as a course book . |
26 | Hubbell and Foster argue that such thinking could lead to a return to the classical views of rain forest and speciation espoused by Corner , Fedorov and van Steenis . |
27 | Bem and Locksley and Colten agree that sex-role inventories express ideas of gender in a particular community at a particular time , and so display built-in constraints and obsolescence ( Bell and Schaffer 1984 ) . |
28 | Mcloughlin and Brown emphasise that this exercise must be undertaken after due consultation with all those involved , recognising that such matters as customer satisfaction can not be addressed without the involvement of the customer , who could be asked to score the quality of the service provided . |
29 | Petras and Laporte suggest that agrarian reform brings about revolutionary attitudes through the frustration felt by those who have failed to benefit ( Petras and LaPorte 1971 ) . |
30 | Pollock and Majeed argue that this behaviour is somehow different in the two countries as the motive is profit in the United States but survival in the internal market here . |