Example sentences of "it is [vb pp] [that] [pron] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 Further procedures which may be undertaken in cases where more detailed information is needed or where it is suspected that there may be serious problems with vision include the visually evaluated response ( VER ) and the electroretinogram ( ERG ) .
2 Moreover that they do not do the work which it is intended that they shall do .
3 However , it is intended that they should extract from the reader that kind of critical attitude with which he should read this book from Chapter 1 onwards .
4 It is intended that they will be run on a regular basis .
5 Personnel to carry out the Quality Auditor role are currently being identified : it is intended that they will be trained to IQA Lead Assessor standards .
6 One or two police forces are experimenting with notebook computers , and perhaps it is intended that they will receive information from the control computer .
7 Thus it is intended that there will be no ‘ phase 3 pilots ’ but rather that the development phase will end with the phase 2 pilots , to be followed immediately by progressive implementation of the new operational system .
8 It is intended that it will draw in towns , villages , fields and woods and , according to the commission , 20 million visitors from an 80 mile radius .
9 While it is understood that the pupil will acknowledge the Church 's viewpoint , it is recognised that he/she may express a personal opinion which differs from , and/or is critical of , the Church 's teaching/practice .
10 They part , but it is arranged that they can meet again any day in White Friars , near Chester 's Inn , at seven in the morning .
11 It is said that they would increase the cost of petrol by 20p a gallon .
12 In the jargon it is said that they can not even get on the Masters and Johnson ‘ ski-slope ’ , let alone start down it .
13 It is said that they should have done so , especially as there were circumstances which might have put and should , it is said , have put experienced medical staff on inquiry .
14 It is said that one can not go anywhere — I know that this was true in west Africa — without meeting someone from Upton who will give good and wise advice .
15 I shall here consider three such attempts to connect past and present : firstly , that which I shall call a ‘ kairos ’ approach , in which the past is basically normative but it is said that there can be development ; secondly , that which I shall call the ‘ golden thread ’ approach , in which a leading motif is lifted out of the past and applied in another situation ; thirdly , that which I shall call an ‘ a priori ethical ’ position , in which essentially authority is seen to lie in the present but there is not perceived to be any fundamental clash with the past .
16 Furthermore , it is said that it would upset the constitutional balance between the courts and the executive if the Crown could be held in contempt of court for disobeying a prerogative order of prohibition or mandamus .
17 It is said that it would be pointless for the justices to make an order that there should be no contact when that order can be overridden and departed from by the local authority with the agreement of the parent .
18 It is said that it would be wrong that the justices should be put in a position of making an order on the merits of the case that there should be no contact , when the next day the local authority and the parent could depart from that order .
19 It is said that it must ‘ appear ’ to the minister that there are ‘ reasons ’ for doubting whether the workers are behind their leaders : and that the minister has given no reasons .
20 It is said that it could not have been used for any other purpose …
21 It is said that it will be able to recognise cursive handwriting and gestures entered with the pen .
22 Given that individuals undertake exchange voluntarily , it is presumed that they must thereby be no worse off and that at least one party to the exchange is better off as a result .
23 He said that there were two situations in which the court would not enforce a clause : ( a ) if at the time of making the contract it is seen that it may in the future operate unfairly or unreasonably ; or ( b ) if after the time of making the contract it is found to operate unreasonably or unfairly even if those circumstances were not envisaged beforehand .
24 Solar ponds are being developed in Israel , where it is hoped that they will eventually contribute 1500 MW .
25 It is hoped that they will keep the client in power , but today , as in Stalin 's day , additional measures are thought necessary to guarantee that the client remains reliable himself .
26 As far as government backbenchers are concerned , their instructions are to be present at these committees but it is hoped that they will be silent as each speech only adds that much longer to the proceedings .
27 In doing so , it is hoped that they will not only benefit from the content of the seminars ( topics such as sixth-form teaching and exams ) but , by rubbing shoulders with and getting to know British teacher- trainees , come to a better understanding of the role-model of a language teacher in the UK .
28 Although the S1 and S2 courses are courses in their own right , it is hoped that they will provide a springboard for those pupils electing to study a technical subject to Standard , Higher and CSYS Grade .
29 It was not known yesterday what the exact number of redundancies would be but it is hoped that they can be achieved voluntarily .
30 It is hoped that we will shortly be starting our own Social Club which will no doubt make full use of them too .
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