Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] [be] that all " in BNC.
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1 | The background to this inquiry was that all students doing so studies as a supplementary study have to produce a project whit assessed by Birmingham Polytechnic . |
2 | The main difficulty of this interpretation is that all traces of the actual cella have been lost ( his p. 18 ) . |
3 | A further concern is that all competitors in a particular market should be treated equally , to avoid a green version of Gresham 's law where bad environmental practices are allowed to chase out good . |
4 | ‘ What I like about old furniture is that all the pieces are favourites , ’ she says . |
5 | What I like about old furniture is that all the pieces are favourites |
6 | The difficulty with this suggestion is that all the sceptical arguments presented , and indeed any interesting sceptical argument , seem to be directed as much against the notion of justified belief as against that of knowledge . |
7 | An important feature of this book is that all the activities described can be used not only with the sample material provided , but also with other materials of the teacher 's own choice . |
8 | Another possibility is that all quasars and BL Lac objects are beamed roughly towards us , and that something else distinguishes them — something that so far remains hidden in the enigmatic central powerhouse . |
9 | The overall result was that All Hallows were third , behind Marple Hall , whose local knowledge brought them in first and Queen Elizabeth GS , Wakefield . |
10 | The principal recommendation is that all listed companies registered in the UK should comply with a code of best practice for corporate governance . |
11 | The second outcome is that all children would be aware of what 's involved in the record of achievement . |
12 | Our principle in the civil service is that all jobs should be available to everyone — irrespective of sex , race , creed or religion . |
13 | On the face of it this seems to be a good idea : one frequently voiced criticism of comprehensive education is that all pupils have been forced to follow a grammar-school curriculum . |
14 | Counsel 's second argument was that all the evidence presented to the court was that the defendant had been seen engaging in actual violence , but not threatening it , as the section requires , On this submission the Court concluded that there was sufficient evidence in the narrative presented to the jury from which they were entitled to conclude that there was threatening behaviour . |
15 | The premise of Basic Instinct is that all women are homicidal maniacs . |
16 | For a German observer who had been interned in Britain 1914-18 , ‘ the great secret of masculine psychology is that all men of all ages act and behave like schoolboys as soon as their individualities are merged in a crowd . ’ |
17 | An alternative theory is that all crime rises in the initial stages of industrialization and urbanization , but that thereafter violence falls while property offences continue to increase . |
18 | The traditional explanation is that all mothers with colicky babies — regardless of what sort of people they are or what else is happening in their lives — suddenly become more confident and relaxed at this point . |
19 | As we know , exercise plays an important part in any diet/exercise routine , but the key thing is that all exercise is not the same . |
20 | The encouraging thing was that all the people he had sentenced were , so far at any rate , in good health . |
21 | The important recommendation was that all non-seminoma patients should have abdominal ( 10 or 12.5 mm spacing ) and thoracic ( 20 mm spacing ) CTs at diagnosis and at fixed intervals during follow-up ; the thoracic CT was to be done with both lung and mediastinal window . |
22 | The important conclusion is that all the cells in the body contain the same genetic information ; what makes the cells different is how that genetic information is used . |
23 | 1.13 Our fundamental assumption is that all pupils are entitled to an education that will provide the opportunity for them to develop to the best of their abilities a competence in and appreciation of English . |
24 | The short answer is that all the other trees are tall , so no one tree can afford not to be . |
25 | However , the most important power was that all designated districts could declare Industrial Improvement Areas . |
26 | Perhaps the most important fact is that all the pigments used in Aquacryl are lightfast . |
27 | Our first rule is that all raw materials must be from a known and identifiable source . |
28 | The only difference is that all that acting , all that recording , all that boring , frightening flying to gigs gave her the cash to fulfil that dream . |
29 | The Minister ( Sir Edward Boyle ) announced that this would take place in 1970/1 and wrote a remarkable preface to the published text in which he stated that ‘ the essential point is that all children should have an equal opportunity of acquiring intelligence , and developing their talents and abilities to the full ’ . |
30 | The one complication is that all Windows applications place the same sort of minimum demands on a machine and so if you want to work in a Windows environment you will have to add the extra requirements to machine fit to run Windows . |