Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] that [art] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ such occasions [ when a judge may properly rule that a document ordinarily immune in the public interest should in the public interest be disclosed ] will be exceptional and the fluctuating fortunes of parties in litigious combat will rarely justify a judge in disturbing an immunity firmly rooted in the public interest .
2 It will be better , perhaps , if she does not wholly know that the will is in question . ’
3 The man will swiftly think that the Duke knew all along .
4 The typical small businessman in Hong Kong now has business interests in southern China , to complement his existing connections through kinship , and would much prefer that a cheaper project be put in place , with a view to the needs of Greater Hong Kong as they will be in the 21st century — this after full consultation with the Chinese authorities .
5 Erm I can personally testify that the , the award winner that this year is somebody that I 've known for something like twenty six , twenty seven years .
6 They give the appearance of a ‘ setting sun ’ under the D string and , as everything else appears to line up okay , I can only presume that the markers themselves are off-centre .
7 The crypts were small , too small to have needed a central pillar to support the ceiling , so we can only presume that the pillar had a symbolic significance to the Minoans ( Plate 18 ) .
8 I 'd better explain that a commune is a sizable place , in this case with a population of 26,000 , including a small town and many villages .
9 He was never told why he lost his captaincy and I can only think that the committee felt that a more adventurous approach was needed .
10 I can only think that the teacher wanted to get as much mileage from the whole thing as she could .
11 We can only stress that no reputable antiques dealer would ever conduct business on a doorstep .
12 Erm I do n't necessarily think that a road running through that area would increase development pressures and basically because it is greenbelt , it 's not going to development pressure .
13 We are unable to explain why vitamin B12 absorption decreased during treatment with loperamide oxide , but can only comment that the magnitude of the change was relatively small .
14 At the very least , conditioned inhibition training is likely to differ from latent inhibition training in that the former is likely to convey the information that a given event ( a given US ) will not occur whereas the latter could only convey that no event will occur .
15 Registration of the vessel in a particular member state did not necessarily guarantee that the vessel in fact had a real economic link with the fishing community of that member state .
16 Thank you chair , erm many of you will perhaps know that the health authority did some pioneering work looking at different standard mortality ratios in different wards in Oxfordshire , and came up with some rather disturbing evidence that some of the wards had significantly higher incidents of death for people primarily in the forty-five to sixty-four age range than others , and Phil and myself wish to continue that work by targeting those wards with a range of measures designed to alleviate some of those health inequalities .
17 There is a belief but open to much doubt that the bridge builder Teasdale supplied various canal spans for the pedestrian traffic across the River Jumna , a major tributary of the Ganges .
18 First to obviously confirm that the A G M is for the er eleventh of er November .
19 This might not only reduce the number of vexatious appeals but might also perhaps ensure that the appellant took the trouble to attend the hearing , even if only to collect his 2 .
20 I suggested a second or so ago that the ordinary reader , unsure of what to make of the shifting realities of Joyce 's writing , might defensively assume that no such hesitations would trouble the experienced reader , but that is far from being a homogeneous class .
21 One can not necessarily assume that the operation of market principles per se will automatically lead to efficiency .
22 The police would not necessarily assume that the bones in the graveyard were of people who had lived at Wyvis Hall , nor that those who had brought about their deaths had lived there .
23 A different reader will spot them quickly , and newspapers and publishers employ people one of whose jobs it is to pick out the " literals " ( slips ) made by writers , typists and typesetters : readers do not necessarily assume that the editor or journalist ca n't spell if they find a printing error .
24 You say , ‘ we will naturally assume that the party is travelling together ’ .
25 Any engineer would naturally assume that the photocells would point towards the light , with their wires leading backwards towards the brain .
26 One can only assume that the farm would suffer if this came about .
27 One can only assume that the purchasers of these lichen-grey accoutrements are members of EXIT , and that anyone attempting to rescue them would receive a bloody nose for their trouble .
28 One can only assume that the later , powerfully muscled and squatter ankylosaurs were more finely tuned to Earth 's gravity .
29 One can only assume that the Roman officials exceeded their authority and treated the royal family with disrespect .
30 Where hedging of bets ( ‘ ambiguity ’ ) is not just feasible but desirable , we can only assume that the problem is not cancer , but hypochondria .
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