Example sentences of "[verb] [that] [adj] [noun] [am/are] " in BNC.

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1 We can surely think of pleasure and pain as referring to felt qualities of experience without denying that these qualities are of radically different kinds .
2 Moreover , while ‘ ideology ’ retains , from the weight of linguistic usage , the sense of organized beliefs ( whether formal and conscious or pervasive and dissolved ) , it can often be supposed that such systems are the true origin of all cultural ( and indeed other social ) production .
3 In a sense that has long been the case , since it has generally been supposed that turbulent flows are contained within a deterministic set of equations — the Navier-Stokes and continuity equations .
4 The results suggest that polymeric diets are as safe and effective as steroids in inducing short term remission .
5 In conclusion , the results of our present study suggest that polymeric diets are a safe and effective treatment for active Crohn 's disease .
6 They suggest that tropical forests be translated into zonal parks or exchanged for poor-world debts .
7 They suggest that sociological perspectives are shaped more by historical circumstances than by objective views of the reality of social life .
8 These results suggest that epithelial cells are important contributors to intestinal platelet activating factor generation under normal and inflammatory conditions and that epithelial cells actively play a part in the pathogenesis of ulcerative colitis .
9 The rich have greater incentive to oppose redistributive policies in that they have much more to lose , and there are arguments that suggest that risk-averse individuals are keener to defend against a loss than to secure a gain ( see Jones and Cullis 1986 ) .
10 Some of the few studies that have taken account of gender suggest that Afro-Caribbean girls are achieving higher levels than boys at school level , partly because they are pursuing different strategies , which are necessary in order to survive in the context of high unemployment and low wages for black male workers ( Fuller , 1983 ; see also Riley , 1986 ; Driver , 1977 ) .
11 While the difficulties of accurately estimating incapacitation effects are immense , the best calculations suggest that such claims are wildly inflated .
12 Many people writing about negative attitudes towards old age suggest that such attitudes are widely held and refer to most old people .
13 We have cultural stereotypes which suggest that such occasions are difficult for us , potentially embarrassing , because we do not know the appropriate responses .
14 Recent developments in organisational theory , currently in vogue with many large corporations , suggest that hierarchical organisations are slow to respond to change , can limit the optimisation of staff potential and have high fixed costs .
15 In view of the current state of the art I can do no more here than suggest that alternative approaches are surely possible .
16 Many commentators suggest that violent incidents are best understood as unique events .
17 All these quotations suggest that social representations are universal .
18 In fact where it has been adopted results suggest that most employees are extremely realistic about their own performance and can indeed make a reasonably accurate assessment .
19 The reports suggest that large numbers are sometimes involved .
20 The results suggest that both contacts are important for effective repression , confirming the requirement for protein-protein cooperativity in operator binding .
21 The idea is graphically summarised by Alison Norman : ‘ We are all familiar with the advertisements and Christmas begging letters which ask for money in terms which suggest that old people are in danger of hypothermia or social isolation simply because they are old — not because they do not have sufficient incomes to heat and repair their homes or to pay for a taxi or telephone . ’
22 Measurements on high-level language programs suggest that local scalars are the most frequent operands , so RISC supports the allocation of locals in registers .
23 Successes such as this suggest that remedial actions are feasible and can bring beneficial effects in a relatively short time .
24 When it comes to referral anecdotal reports suggest that informal gratuities are being paid by specialists to doctors for referring patients , potentially leading to overinvestigation and overtreatment .
25 The practices of organisations in all of the sectors studied suggest that fixed-term contracts are by no means the only way in which short-term contract workers can be recruited .
26 1987 ) suggest that older people are fairly negative about future health status .
27 For example , although Rampton-type surveys suggest that Asian pupils are performing as well as white pupils , there is growing evidence of wide variations in school achievement within the Asian communities : in particular , children of Bangladeshi origin appear to be achieving at much lower levels than other Asian groups ( House of Commons Home Affairs Committee , 1986 ) .
28 Data reported by Malingreau and Tucker ( 1988 ) , however , suggest that these estimates are incorrect and that conversion to pasture is at least as significant as shifting cultivation .
29 As the same alanine and glycine codons are present at these positions in both human and bovine cDNA sequences and because the human gene , where analysed ( data not shown ) , has the same intron/exon boundaries , we suggest that these conclusions are applicable to the GGF gene structure and to the mRNA splicing patterns in both species .
30 Medical theorists suggest that these experiences are actually hallucinations caused by the brain 's mood-controlling limbic system being starved of oxygen .
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