Example sentences of "[noun] [be] that [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The good reasons are that these projects have not been chucking people out into the community " willy-nilly " .
2 The signs are that some people there were more sophisticated and succeeded in bilking the revenue .
3 The chief dangers are that some flaw in the title will be overlooked , or that requisitions on title will not be delivered within the stipulated time ( now six working days after delivery of abstract ) , so that a seller 's conveyancer might plead this breach of the conditions of sale as an excuse for not clearing up a genuine difficulty .
4 Other uncontested stipulations were that any candidate for the CCD had to be " over 21 , a practising citizen and be elected in the election registry of Peru " .
5 A major advantage of both MID-TEL and MID-CRED is that neither system requires customers to install expensive computer equipment .
6 My second recommendation is that both parties think in terms of a return to an independent consumer protection Department .
7 The result is that all Home Secretaries are grossly over-worked , although most will have found their own ways of keeping their heads above water .
8 The result is that many manufacturing firms have decided to locate their physical production processes outside the metropolitan regions .
9 The result is that many glider pilots are becoming complacent about parking and on a really windy day it is not unusual to see gliders at risk , just waiting for the first really big gust of wind to blow them over .
10 The result is that many farm workers are caught in the poverty trap between exemption from taxation and receipt of means-tested benefit ( Winyard 1978 ) .
11 The result is that many homes still have lead pipes .
12 The result is that little attention is given to people 's own experience and understandings of these processes and the fact that such understandings in turn lead to ways in which they attempt to improve their circumstances within the constraints and opportunities with which they are faced .
13 And the result is that more motorists than ever are opting for life behind the wheel of a diesel vehicle .
14 The result is that most students can choose between two or three honours specialisations in the final year .
15 The result is that any notion of musical futurism has fallen into abeyance .
16 The result is that any case of cholera in the pits has an unusually favourable situation in which to spread . "
17 The likely result is that this wording does no more than track the law as laid down in Jones v Sherwood Computer Services plc [ 1991 ] NPC 60 : see 13.6 .
18 The result is that this sector of the industry now has a new generation of site distribution equipment to transport bulk food or plated meals , in equipment which suits its requirements , at sensible , serviceable and , most importantly , affordable prices .
19 The result is that this type of wave combs material down from the top of the beach giving a net erosive effect .
20 The irony is that this victory may contain the seeds of eventual defeat .
21 But the irony is that this perception was not clearly shared by the Conservative high command , at least until quite late in the campaign .
22 The irony is that this month , while you 're exuding such apparent confidence , you 'll feel on the inside like a bag of nerves .
23 One point that must be borne in mind is that such maps can not be produced using Landsat MSS or TM data alone .
24 The point , however , that the inquirer should bear in mind is that these exemptions and exceptions have been granted because the organisations concerned have demonstrated that either they are already regulated by other statutes or are subject to a reporting procedure through branch returns to a central body which itself reports to the Charity Commission .
25 The reason you would ask about ‘ luxury ’ proteins is that these proteins are special to the cell .
26 The view of the authors is that these ideas need developing further to represent a document as a complex data object holding information in the form of structured data .
27 Each of these has changed substantially in the post-war period , but the central argument of this chapter is that such changes can not be seen as the result only of changes within the UK .
28 A general point to be kept in mind throughout this chapter is that any tax reform involves the costs of transition from one scheme to another .
29 The particular case which I want to develop in the next chapter is that those strategies that involve sustained denial of or inattention to personal ideas , values , philosophy and vision , are bad strategies .
30 The general concensus is that some housework is required — car cleaning , bed making , one lad even tries his hand at ironing !
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