Example sentences of "[be] [adj] that such [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Attitudes to school , the significance of the curriculum , perceptions of the nature of society … are learned early and impossible to reshape in classrooms which are run by teachers who are unaware that such tensions exist .
2 ‘ I 'm afraid that such questions will have to be answered , Miss Glynn ; if not by you , then by others . ’
3 Nothing can prevent people from saying that the answers he gave were not ‘ adult or ‘ fundamental ’ , but it should be obvious that such adjectives are as culture biased as Saruman 's ‘ real ’ : by themselves they express only the prejudices of the user .
4 Some of these characteristics are now addressed in slightly more detail ; it will be obvious that such problems merit a paper in themselves .
5 And who could be sure that such secrets could be kept from the spy network still strong in every dormitory and classroom ?
6 Walker , a former employee of the ARC , said the council 's research was of a high standard but said ‘ as a ratepayer one would be worried that such standards of excellence would be properly managed by the ARC . ’
7 You must be aware that such labels may not be appropriate for the whole of the period that you are studying .
8 Well , I am shocked that such things can be published , I do not think it is right .
9 Many general practitioners are worried that such referrals will be complex and time consuming and will generate too much extra work .
10 The authors of the Black Report , who included one of the most eminent Fabian academics , Professor Peter Townsend , were clear that such disparities were socially unjust and the NHS needed policies to address them , but they were forced to conclude from the evidence that the major causes of health inequalities lay beyond the NHS and were rooted in the material conditions of life experienced by the different classes .
11 In Hooper v. Exeter Corporation , 56 L.J.Q.B. 457 , the plaintiff paid harbour dues on all limestone which he landed , being unaware that such dues were not payable in respect of limestone to be burnt .
12 In medieval England what came under pressure were the conventions by which claims to land rights were legitimated ; while some sectors of society were attempting to make written records the prime guarantor of ‘ truth ’ and legitimacy , others were suspicious that such records could easily be forged and preferred to put their faith in seals and in the oral testimony of ‘ twelve good men and true ’ .
13 One or two were aware that such connections could be made , that quantum mechanics was qualitatively different :
14 From a rural development point of view it is preferable that such industries have a family or community labour base and that the initiative for their establishment comes principally from the community .
15 It is possible that such customers will not be concerned by an indirect holding via an index future ( Martin , 1988 ; Luskin , 1987 , pp. 343 4 ) .
16 Nor do the minutes provide evidence of any formal attempt to compare the cost of improving Village school building with the cost of transporting the children to Green Haven , though it is possible that such studies took place .
17 It is possible that such errors however , are merely indicative of the same craftsman 's readjustments .
18 It is possible that such perturbations to regional heat flow may have affected the evolution of vitrinite reflectance in the underlying Carboniferous rocks .
19 Lillian Faderman accepts that women 's relations may have been less physical in the past , but asserts that it is possible that such relations were still lesbian :
20 It is doubtful that such activities can be interpreted as remnants from pre-communist society , soon to disappear as socialism or communism comes of age .
21 It is clear that such forms are designed primarily to protect the hospital from legal action .
22 It is clear that such gaps restrict methods of handling data ( see chapters 5 and 6 ) ; for example data for age- and sex-groups could not easily be aggregated .
23 Although the reference to memory is not as direct as in the other questions it is clear that such decisions at the strategical level are based on memory in at least two separate ways .
24 Exactly similar inferences can be made in cases like example ( 18 ) , and it is clear that such inferences are fundamental to our sense of coherence in discourse : if the implicatures were not constructed on the basis of the assumption of relevance , many adjacent utterances in conversation would appear quite unconnected .
25 It is clear that such occasions brought together , often from many countries , knights who were brought up and trained in the same martial traditions .
26 It is clear that such districts should be the point of contact with the local population .
27 It is interesting that such distinctions are most clearly and most confidently made in relatively complex and highly specialized societies .
28 It is arguable that such determinations are best left to the elected representatives .
29 Furthermore , corporate capitalism is actually a generator of substantial inequalities in primary incomes , and it is arguable that such inequalities are a precondition for the effective functioning of the system , with the consequence that the scope for redistribution is in practice limited .
30 It is unfortunate that such considerations may be thrust out of view by continuing public — and perhaps personal — revulsion towards the concept of child sexuality .
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