Example sentences of "this is [adv] a [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 This is rarely a problem for dating an archaeological site where fragments of broken pottery tend to abound , and it is usual to date several sherds from the same context to provide an average age and better precision .
2 Shareholders , banks and so on do not necessarily tightly constrain managers essentially because they lack enough information to do so , and this is either a result of some problem in the market for information ( e.
3 One difficulty is the amount of imputation as described above ; this is particularly a problem for the study of inner city areas and such topics as social deprivation , where the information is likely to be more conjectural .
4 This is particularly a problem in chronic disease .
5 This is particularly a problem in the rural areas , and it 's particularly in the rural areas where this happens .
6 This is thus a subject for students with wide interests ; courses are taken in Chemistry , Mathematics , Economics , Computing and Management in addition to Engineering subjects .
7 Implicit in this is both a fear of female competition for scarce jobs and a sense of the need of a woman 's domestic labour at home .
8 This is even a problem in better documented periods , and will only be resolved , if at all , by extensive research at the sites .
9 This is presumably a result of the flexibility of the chain which allows extensive convolution thereby impeding stabilization of the required long range alignment .
10 This is partly a question of social mobility but it may also be a response to the sort of repetitive jobs many of these people are performing .
11 This is partly a question of the so-called ‘ burden of dependency ’ .
12 This is partly a question of attitude , partly a matter of training .
13 This is partly a reflection of the growing responsibility which the Welsh Office has assumed for education at all levels in the Principality .
14 ‘ I think this is partly a reaction against the artificial nature of our media system , ’ says Sut Jhally , a communications professor at Amherst University .
15 This is partly a consequence of simple arithmetic .
16 This is partly a consequence of the fact that the great majority of single parents are women and partly because such families are disproportionately working class .
17 This is partly a consequence of the non-finite or ‘ leaky ’ nature of syntactic systems , which in turn is associated with the relationship between syntax and speaker meaning ( or intention ) .
18 This is partly a result of private acquisition of forest lands prior to the General Revision Act of 1891 , when it made more economic sense to annex high quality , easily accessible forests .
19 Although this is partly a result of lower market share during the last days of The Sunday Correspondent , the IoS has made ground while its rival The Observer has not .
20 This is partly a result of the success of the Registration and Inspection Service 's efforts to encourage a move to more single room provision .
21 This is partly a result of the small sizes of international bond issues , but also a consequence of the long holding periods typical of such bonds .
22 This is partly a matter of winning and keeping customers .
23 This is partly a matter of technology — more paper mills need to be built with the capacity to take old paper instead of new pulp .
24 This is partly a matter of religious faith concerning the world to come .
25 This is partly a matter of the distinction between ways of understanding the abstract character of a system and actual history already identified in a quotation from Gramsci .
26 This is partly a matter of writing appropriate sentences , for example , so that you can distinguish your point of view in debate from someone else 's .
27 The position we have reached is that when it is said that the sea appears to a viewer to be uniformly blue this is neither a statement about what Reid calls the ‘ visible appearance ’ of the sea , nor straightforwardly a statement about the viewer 's opinion .
28 This is surely a slice of history shown as it really was , and all who served with Bomber Command will be delighted that John Searby recorded their courageous efforts so well .
29 If such reviews succeed on their merits , this is surely a demonstration of the extent of past missed entitlement .
30 This is not a departure from random methods since these are used within the strata ; it is simply a job done beforehand as a precaution against freak random results if the distribution of the special factors in the population is accurately known beforehand .
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