Example sentences of "[be] made that [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Allegations have been made that successful convictions in a number of key murder trials have been dependent upon confession evidence which has been improperly obtained during police interrogation .
2 A guarantee had been made that any centre submitting all results by the end of a given month would have all candidates certificated by the end of the following month .
3 Checks have been made that this bone was not missed during laboratory processing of the pellet samples , and there is little chance of bones being detached from pellets before collection because of the compact nature of barn owl pellets .
4 Although laser gain has been observed at a shorter wavelength — 18–2 nanometres by Geoff Pert 's group at the University of Hull — no claims have been made that those experiments produced coherent light ; the emission included radiation generated by other processes .
5 Finally , the movement towards greater sexual equality is affecting relationships within the family , but a strong argument can be made that traditional role differentiation between men and women is strongly resistant to change ( see Part Four ) .
6 A general rule could be made that weak syllables which are phonologically composed of a plosive or fricative consonant plus are uncommon except in initial position in the words .
7 The point should also be made that many of these techniques are statistically and technically complex , often requiring computerised operation .
8 Arguments will no doubt be made that such a division is unrealistic ; but , in my view , not only is it essential for solving resource problems ; it is also a division which is made now , albeit not explicitly .
9 Each of the lower feeders had their own cropping techniques , and a general assumption can be made that such techniques had themselves a co-evolutionary impact on plants .
10 ( e ) Duties generally ( NB Clause 13 ) The matters which would normally be recorded in the partnership agreement under this head include : ( 1 ) the standard form " just and faithful " obligationstrictly unnecessary in view of the overriding nature of the equivalent statutory provisions and the implication that will always be made that such duty exists , but invariably spelled out in writing ; ( 2 ) a requirement that the partners devote themselves to the business of the firm .
11 There is no need whatever to follow the capital sharing ratio and no presumption would be made that that should be implied .
12 The point also needs to be made that these figures do not relate to gross income or net income in the sense that any member of the public would normally understand it .
13 It may well be that arguments could be made that this sense of unreasonableness should be the only mechanism for controlling discretion .
14 In the case of the gymnasium , which would depreciate , an assumption can be made that this capital discharged represents depreciation .
15 Like any new improvements this had its opponents , claims being made that this work would drain the surrounding wells , so that those not connected would get no water .
16 Continued allegations were made that surplus revenues were being applied for civic and municipal purposes and not for the improvement of the Harbour in accordance with the Acts of 1799 and 1826 .
17 The assumption is made that dissatisfied workers are more likely to leave the one job for another , take time off , or go on strike , but there has been considerable debate about all three measures , and there are cogent reasons for doubting that any of them serve as adequate indicators of job satisfaction .
18 The issue of the legitimacy of corporate enterprise can , however , be saved from being swallowed up in this wider debate if the assumption is made that alternative patterns of distribution can be secured through state action should the prevailing one be considered morally unappealing .
19 Such analytic paraphrases are usually conducted from the position of a specific ( even though not always openly or clearly stated ) ontological bias ; and often the assumption is made that all purportive references to " non-meanings " in factual statements , in the final analysis , can be translated into references to ontological existents of the preferred sort .
20 ( ii ) Next , a check is made that all referenced files are present .
21 Then there is a section which deals with the citation of authority by the parties , whether a welfare report has been considered , and the pro forma is dealing with cases where specifically the welfare check list has to be considered and the suggestion is made that each of the considerations under section 1(3) ( a ) to ( g ) are set out individually and the judgment or the findings of fact set out under each paragraph .
22 No pretence is made that this is an ideal code : indeed its paucity ( subs ( 8 ) for example has well nigh limitless potential for disputes as to what matters might be considered " ordinary " in the circumstances of a particular firm ) , and the reliance on dissolution as the means to resolve disputes , is the very reason why a properly drafted partnership agreement should be regarded as commercially indispensable .
23 No suggestion was made that non-litigation costs were not amenable to being quantified by taxation .
24 A distinction was made in the first chapter between three types of risk , objective , estimated and subjective , and the assumption was made that subjective risk is closely related to the concept of arousal as it has been used in much memory research .
  Next page