Example sentences of "[verb] that such [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Moore is not denying that such elucidation is sometimes needed and possible , but bringing home to us that this is never what is going on when all things with a certain complex property are said to be good .
2 We will see in Section 24.7 that modern ideas about chaotic dynamics suggest that such classification might be possible .
3 The studies tentatively suggest that such union organisational factors are more important influences in promoting internal democracy than are national , contextual characteristics such as the political and industrial relations systems , or the existence of competing union federations .
4 Short-term leases , if they do n't contain an absolute bar to assignment , commonly contain a covenant by the lessee not to assign the lease without the lessor 's licence , and usually provide that such licence shall not be unreasonably withheld — if such proviso is omitted , then acting for a prospective lessee you should always insert it in the draft .
5 All members of the company ( though not its secretary ) must be qualified solicitors , and there are special provisions to apply when a member dies or is struck off the roll or otherwise loses his qualification to practise , which in essence provide that such member 's shares become non-voting so long as they remain registered in unqualified hands , and only qualified solicitors will be able to vote as proxies .
6 Many readers will readily recognise that such purchase decisions are often fraught with difficulty and argument .
7 Borrel quotes an unidentified 18th-century theorist as explaining that such notation , with ‘ des croches et des doubles croches blanches ’ ( ‘ flagged' void semi-minims and fusas , as in illus.1 in modern notation , crotchets and quavers ) , ‘ mark a much greater slowness in the tempo ’ .
8 Aid donors had recently taken a tough stance in particular with the Sudanese government for preventing relief aircraft from reaching areas in the largely Christian south , where the civil war against the Sudanese People 's Liberation Army ( SPLA ) was at its height ; the Sudanese had claimed that such relief was being used to aid the rebels .
9 It is sometimes claimed that people in many cultures are aware of the ill-effects of inbreeding ( Lindzey , 1967 ) , but nobody , as far as I know , has claimed that such knowledge is universal .
10 Nevertheless , it can be claimed that such exploration will be discussing a theistic structure found in the Eastern as well as the Western traditions .
11 Since then , many other doctors who treat food intolerance and chemical sensitivity have claimed that such sensitivity can produce a wide range of mental problems .
12 We expect that such Officer involvement will lead to increased mutual understanding of the quality assurance ethos as practised by both Glasgow Polytechnic and SCOTVEC ’ .
13 I am saddened to find that such thinking still exists within the profession .
14 Graham J found that such information was not readily available and went on to say that the information had been obtained as a result of considerable labour and expense on the part of the plaintiffs and was therefore valuable and , it followed , confidential .
15 It is often recommended that such work is coordinated by a ‘ key worker ’ .
16 It has been argued that special attention should be focused upon the resilience and potential for recovery of the soil profile in view of the inputs induced by man ( Trudgill , 1977 , chapter 8 ) , and the importance of the problem is underlined by Toy ( 1982 ) in a review of accelerated erosion when he concludes that such erosion can be considered to be the pre-eminent environmental problem in the United States by virtue of its widespread occurrence and cumulative cost .
17 ‘ We can only stress that such information from the public is vital if we are to bring people like Watson to trial .
18 Advice has been received that such work would not be more than 5% of the adviser 's time .
19 The Widdicombe Committee recommended that such attendance should remain possible subject to two safeguards :
20 It is , therefore , recommended that such covenant be insisted upon .
21 The court ruled that such action was contrary to the 1950 European Convention of Human Rights , which guaranteed , to any individual deprived of freedom , the right to a review in a court of law , as well as the right to contest the reasons for a reimprisonment .
22 As was shown in chapter 4 , some 55 per cent of lone-parent families are in receipt of Supplementary Benefits , suggesting that such specificity could be important in this instance , especially since these poorer families will not be proportionately distributed among all Local Authorities .
23 Even though the parent has the option to issue convertible preference shares in substitution for the bonds , the requirements of paragraph 22 of the [ draft ] FRS again entail that such conversion should not be anticipated .
24 Some , of course , deny that such purity of method is possible but few would argue with the proposition that where a description of law is coloured by the expositor 's own values it is a virtue for these values explicitly to be registered .
25 Nevertheless , we need to consider what problems might arise and make provision accordingly , accepting that such provision should be very flexible if it is to cope with the range of need presented by the disabled .
26 The Attorney-General , while submitting that such use of Parliamentary material would breach article 9 , accepted that it was for the courts to determine the legal meaning and effect of article 9 .
27 Yet most would want to agree that such belief ought not to be contradictory in any way ( while bearing in mind the distinction between paradox and contradiction referred to at the end of Chapter 6 ) .
28 The link with sovereignty and with the ultra vires doctrine is provided by implication : parliament only intended that such discretion should be exercised on relevant and not irrelevant considerations , or to achieve proper and not improper purposes .
29 Under an act of George I weavers could take their complaints to magistrates , but Temple himself admitted that such recourse would mark a man and reduce his prospects of obtaining work .
30 ( 2 ) Where a competent objector desires to object in relation to any application , he shall , not later than seven days before the meeting of the licensing board at which the application is to be considered : ( a ) lodge with the clerk of the board a written notice of objection which be signed by the objector or his agent and shall specify the grounds of his objection and ( b ) intimate his objection to the applicant in the manner provided by subsection ( 3 ) below , and an objection shall not be entertained by the licensing board unless it is proved or admitted that such objection was intimated to the applicant as aforesaid .
  Next page