Example sentences of "they [vb base] that [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They declare that the united Germany , too , shall abide by these commitments .
2 Spain , Portugal , Ireland and Greece also oppose an early enlargement , albeit for rather different reasons : they fear that the current transfer of resources to them from the richer countries — above all , from Britain and Germany — might be put at risk , and have made it clear that their support for any growth in the size of the Community is contingent on their receipt of guaranteed levels of Cohesion payments .
3 You do not need to invest in technology to comply with the quality standards , but they concede that a computerised accounts system is really the only cost-effective way to deal with the financial management requirements .
4 If they judge that the New Moon can be clearly seen , then it will be Id .
5 They contend that the original objective — to protect the holy places of Islam — has been hijacked by the war-mongering regime of President Hosni Mubarak .
6 They stress that the only farmers who can benefit from the immediate purchase of ewe premium rights are those who have submitted a 1993 claim for more sheep than they have quota and are buying or leasing retrospectively .
7 Lippmann 's view , like J. S. Mill 's , was that the electors have the right to choose their rulers or government , but beyond that they should leave government to govern without interference or pressure : " Their duty is to fill the office and not to direct the office-holder. " ( p. 46 ) A not dissimilar view was put forward by Bernard Crick , who said of referenda , the power to recall representatives and other devices for popular intervention : " They forget that the first business of government is to govern …
8 They suggest that the principal growth fault in the Mesozoic may simply propagate from the subcrop of the thrust and extend towards the surface at a steeper angle , as illustrated by the Mere Fault ( see also Lake 1975 , in connection with the structure of the Weald ) .
9 They suggest that the new observatory at La Palma in the Canary Islands , where the telescope has been taken , should not be run by the RGO .
10 They suggest that the adverse reaction to the food has some direct effect on centres in the brain which control breathing .
11 But , rather than proposing that fewer should be wrongfully accused , they suggest that the legal system should be changed so that fewer will be found innocent .
12 If they suggest that the legal sanctions against the abuse of power by company controllers are not wholly adequate , it must be remembered that it is but rarely that power is abused .
13 And more important , they suggest that the different states of consciousness , which manifest themselves as different ‘ personalities ’ in one individual , may correspond to different patterns in the Physiological activity of the brain .
14 The variety of contexts in which the laws are preserved and the chance survival of the precepts of Childebert I and Chlothar II show that the great law-books of the Merovingian kingdom , the Pactus Legis Salicae and the Lex Ribvaria , were only one part of the legal output of the period , and they suggest that the Merovingian kings legislated often .
15 They suggest that the particular problem that confronted Beccaria was the observable fact that criminals were in one important respect clearly differentiated : they were mostly poor .
16 They say that a close encounter between the Sun and a more diffuse star-like object in the cluster tore off a hot filament of gases .
17 They say that a domestic crisis brings a family closer together .
18 The old zeks , the long-term men , they say that the first months in the camps are the hardest .
19 Probability theorists escape this oddity by defining absolute probability in terms of relative probability : they say that the absolute probability of h = the probability of h relative to a tautology .
20 They say that the extra energy would be unnecessary if modern conservation methods were adopted .
21 They say that the flabby reaction to the Gulf War ( and the lack of reaction to their vague anti-Gulf War B-side ‘ Riding On Through ’ ) made them realise they needed to be more specific .
22 They say that the voluntary code will allow the firms to continue their aggressive marketing of the infant-formula — including using health workers to promote it .
23 They say that an additional £420 in student loans and an uprating of 5.5 per cent .
24 They realise that a free-trade solution is required : the key to success will depend as much on political courage as diplomatic skill .
25 But then they realise that a new line is needed .
26 They realise that the squeaky hinge gets the oil , and there is no virtue in suffering in silence .
27 On all of their criteria they conclude that a school-based approach is likely to be superior to either one based upon testing or inspection .
28 They conclude that the easterly route does not give value for money and can not be justified on any conceivable cost benefit analysis , or on any opportunity cost analysis , or on any orthodox accounting analysis .
29 They conclude that the available evidence points to employment in the long run shifting out of the primary sector into both the manufacturing and the service sectors .
30 They hope that a moderate faction — perhaps led by the current prime minister , Hun Sen — will accept a role as the junior partner in a coalition government .
  Next page