Example sentences of "[adv] it becomes clear " in BNC.

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1 Thus it becomes clear that Representation is fraud ’ ( chapter I , ‘ Parliaments ’ ) .
2 The more it becomes clear that the United States is the only military superpower , the greater the possibility that the economic strengths of Germany in Europe ( and Japan ) will be developed as a complementary factor .
3 However , the more we investigate this phenomenon with the client the more often it becomes clear that the avoidance is maintained because the person is afraid of the fear response itself .
4 Increasingly it becomes clear that her plight was the result of her poor health ; in addition to the regular help she was receiving , the overseers had the generosity to pay her various ad hoc amounts as the need arose , ‘ On acct. being sick ’ .
5 Here it becomes clear that this route from Morar is in fact a simple passage to a valley draining east to less harsh landscapes ahead .
6 Here it becomes clear what is at stake in developing a grammar which will provide acceptable criteria for distinguishing " right " from " wrong " in linguistic usage : intervention into the culture of the masses .
7 If one adds to this one other incontrovertible fact — that the overwhelming majority of women have lived their lives without economic freedom or autonomy , but as dependants or chattels lacking control over the crucial fixed aspects of their own lives — then it becomes clear that the chameleon nature of women is their necessary self-protection .
8 If the word Gruyère on the packet can induce people to buy the product in question ( I have tasted it ; and it seems only fair to say that of its kind it is of a matchless ignobility ) then it becomes clear that it is a too innocent belief in authenticity and the efficacy of the ancient formula which has made us such easy victims of the purveyors of the farmyard-fresh Surrey chicken from the battery house , the mountain-brook trout from the breeding tank , via the deep-freeze , the hedgerow-ripened blackberry pie-filling out of the cardboard box .
9 But if we now recall the alternative definition of democracy as popular power , or popular sovereignty , then it becomes clear that it can not be a democratic act for the people to vote away their own power and their own rights ; any more than if I freely renounce my freedom I can remain free because the renunciation was a free act .
10 Then it becomes clear that politicians , for example , can be involved in processes of policy-making , implementation , evaluation and adjudication .
11 If , as he further suggests , characterisation " involves the manifestation of inner states , desires , motives , intentions , beliefs through action , including speech acts " ( 1988 : 226 ) , then it becomes clear that the methods of analysing conversational behaviour in the real world are also readily applicable to the world of the dramatic work .
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