Example sentences of "argue that [det] " in BNC.

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1 There were those who argued that such action would alienate world opinion and sabotage the chances of a diplomatic solution .
2 As we have seen in a previous chapter , he argued that such an illusory growth could in fact mask a real decline in values and use-values .
3 But as we have seen , Bukharin argued that such a method was quite wrong , since it presupposed that the two sectors were wholly antagonistic , whereas they formed a contradictory unity , a living totality .
4 However , the Younger Committee argued that such a topic as privacy , which can be subject to rapid changes in social convention , was probably best not regulated on the basis of the slow build-up of case law , which would always tend to reflect the values of an earlier period rather than of contemporary society .
5 We argued that such statements reflect the growing consensus nationally about what constitutes good practice in the teaching of English .
6 Some authors argued that such feedback was the primary signal for hunger while others argued that the signal came from elsewhere .
7 He argued that such a philosophical position could not cope with the phenomena of dreams and especially hypnosis .
8 Indeed , in Pearlman v. Harrow School Governors ( C.A. , 1979 ) Lord Denning argued that such a distinction was sterile and should be discarded .
9 Others , like Dr Barclay , a staff surgeon-major , argued that such a system would destroy the men 's self-respect and counteract the good effects of environmental reforms , a position upheld in the report of the 1871 Royal Commission .
10 Both Christabel Pankhurst and Hamilton argued that such recent theories were deeply linked to male attitudes , which saw women as ‘ primarily created for the sexual gratification of men ’ .
11 Weber argued that such groups could overlap class distinctions eg. the present day Labour Party .
12 In reply , Rathbone argued that such feminists had overlooked the fact that ‘ some aspects of our whole social fabric [ are ] man-made through generations to suit masculine interests and glorify masculine standards ’ .
13 Thorndyke argued that such stories are easy to remember because they have a particular structure .
14 argued that such inferences are stored in memory along with the information explicitly contained in the passage , with the result that when subjects are given a recognition test they will falsely identify the inference as having occurred in the passage .
15 Later economists argued that such an economy would also be efficient in a precise sense .
16 The CBI and other industrial representatives argued that such incentives already existed in the form of the employee 's salary , the training undergone at the firm 's expense , and the provision of a suitable working environment .
17 Innocent 's imposition of an interdict was parried by the archbishop of Toledo who argued that such a sentence would only encourage heresy and the Muslims , but Innocent did not stop trying to break the marriage .
18 Industry argued that such a requirement would stymie its competitiveness , and that , in any case , changes in emissions from existing plants would only ever be small-scale .
19 They argued that such gifts could influence the buyer 's objectivity , and that they should be restricted to such nominal items as calendars , diaries , pens , etc .
20 Leaders of the COS argued that many charities were encouraging the ‘ demoralization ’ of the poor by handing out benefits in cash and kind too readily and with no attempt to ensure long-term improvement in the client 's condition .
21 In Britain , Owen and Mivart argued that many cases of evolution consisted of parallel lines of development within the same group , all driven in the same direction as though by an internally programmed force .
22 Finally , Mario Segre in one of the most brilliant of his early studies argued that many of the Italian scenes with Gauls — such as the frieze of Civita Alba in Picenum , which was discovered at the end of the last century — may represent a Celtic attack on the temple of Apollo and Artemis at Didyma near Miletus , which was sacked in 277/6 B.C. ( Studi Etruschi 8 ( 1934 ) , 137–42 ) .
23 He argued that many organisations ( especially those that were relatively long-lasting and dependent on leaderships for their organisation and continuance ) could be interpreted in terms of the transference of early childhood affections .
24 The theory was first put forward by H R Buchanan in his Manual of Psychometry in 1889 , when he argued that all objects contain the history of the world because they are connected to the Akashic Chronicles .
25 This helped to deal a crippling blow to the preformationist theory , which argued that all parts of a living organism are already formed in miniature in the seed or egg from which it comes .
26 In this book he argued that all life should be a preparation for dying .
27 Hume argued that all our knowledge of facts ( as opposed to what he called ‘ relations of ideas ’ , as he termed the necessary , ideal truths of , for example , mathematics ) is drawn from experience and must be firmly based upon it .
28 In his review for Vanity Fair Pare Lorentz argued that all the minor characters in I am a Fugitive were caricatures and that the film had been spoilt by the director 's decision to make the fugitive a hero and to tell the story through him rather than making the actual prison system the central focus of the film .
29 Last year , a report for the European Commission argued that all EC countries should set corporate taxes within a Community-wide minimum and maximum .
30 With meticulous footnoting , she now argued that all plots and revolutions against the social order in human history had been caused by secret societies , through the use of black magic , mass hypnotism and telepathy .
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