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

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1 The view is almost certain to be that these tax-free boats should not remain in EC waters unless VAT is paid .
2 It 's not just that drama teachers are nostalgic romantics who hanker for a simpler way of life ( though there may well be an element of truth in that ) ; it 's that these self-contained communities can not easily call upon outside forces to solve their problems .
3 The most likely explanation is that these constipated patients are a heterogeneous group including patients without autonomic nervous system dysfunction , whose loss of peristaltic activity might instead be the result of intrinsic nerve damage or other motility disorder .
4 This statement was made in the context of the planning and design of hotels for new constructionn , but an obvious corollary is that these major systems should be properly serviced to ensure that the hotel continues to operate successfully every day .
5 The advantage of the method of analysis suggested here is that these international influences are not treated as isolated and exogenous instances , as if operated by deus ex machina , but are explicable and connected within the context of the workings of the world economic system .
6 That is one point of view ; another is that these future Nobel laureates may in fact earn their prizes by bringing more supercomputing to science , and thus moving more of science into cyberspace .
7 It is that these additional deposits can only come from some other bank .
8 My hypothesis is that these varying conceptions in the mind have real psychic and political consequences which ought to be taken into account when considering change strategies in organizations and , more fundamentally , when considering what we mean by the term ‘ quality of working life ’ .
9 An important point is that these large-scale convection cells fit in with the dimensions of plates .
10 A third requirement is that these general rules be complemented by the equality of all before the law .
11 A standard objection to such views is that these general principles often clash one with one another as necessary truths could not .
12 One supposed justification is that these extra offences are needed to cope with ‘ group offending ’ , which causes fear in ordinary citizens , and extra difficulties for the police and for prosecutors ( in obtaining persuasive evidence ) .
13 The fear that is often expressed is that these new forms of cultivation will result in soil conditions analogous to the Oklahoma ‘ Dust Bowl ’ of the 1930s .
14 The trouble is that these new trees tend to be specially developed strains which are often alien to the areas in which they are planted .
15 The implication here is that these prehistoric trackways wandered across open land .
16 As a physical description , we expect the passage to contain a large number of physical , concrete nouns ( stakes , bamboo , fences , fishermen , ruins , etc ) but what is more striking is that these concrete nouns are matched by nouns which are more abstract in one way or another .
17 The problem is that these internal processes are bound to be influenced by the person 's experiences ; it would be unreasonable to think of them as being entirely autonomous .
18 Whilst the evident unpopularity of Soviet domination in Eastern Europe may be thought to make such forces reliable in wartime for garrison and rear duties only , fact is that these military forces are trained and equipped for a war with NATO , according to an offensive doctrine of ‘ coalition warfare ’ , designed to place them from the start of hostilities onto an ‘ external front ’ .
19 The clear objective of every SPRED group is that these special people are visible within their parish as active members , participating and contributing to the life of that faith community .
20 One hypothesis is that these angry feelings are projected into shop stewards .
21 Yet crucial to Van den Berghe 's work , and indeed central to our argument , is that these instinctive drives involved in establishing personal and social identity are only latent .
22 The point here is that these surrealist signifiers in ‘ allegory ’ are real , already referents .
23 One reason is that these high rates are suitable only for near targets .
24 ‘ What was novel in the fifteenth century was that these rich people ( the upper middle classes ) began to build splendid dwellings for themselves in such great numbers ’ writes Mr Thornton , and the fact that interior decoration appears in something approaching its present-day form in this period is the key to this book .
25 The effect , for them at least , was that these normative bonds were loosened .
26 A major advantage of this type of input was that these basic validation checks were made at input time and any errors detected were displayed back to the operator immediately , thus allowing corrections to be made quickly .
27 Controlling and reproducing the cell was , it seemed , all about controlling and reproducing information ; and what distinguished the molecules that embodied this new idea , proteins , DNA and RNA , from the much more boring small molecules that until then biochemists had worked with was that these giant molecules seemed to embody information ; they were , it appeared , informational macromolecules .
28 As John Maynard-Smith knows , I 've always been , in a less expert way than he , a Darwinist and I 've always felt , and you exemplified that tonight , I think , John , the beauty if the situation was that these profound theories corresponded with what a man of good sense , rationality , unswayed by prejudice and emotion , would be bound to belief when faced with the evidence .
29 His objection was that these poetic celebrations of the coarse side of army life were an offence against English traditions of Christian civilisation , forming part of a larger ‘ back wave ’ which was manifesting itself in various ways : ‘ the Hooligan in Politics , in Literature , and Journalism ’ , ‘ the Hooligan spirit of patriotism ’ , and all the other barbaric symptoms of ‘ the restless and uninstructed Hooliganism of the time ’ above which ‘ the flag of a Hooligan Imperialism is raised ’ .
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