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

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1 One point that must be borne in mind is that such maps can not be produced using Landsat MSS or TM data alone .
2 Each of these has changed substantially in the post-war period , but the central argument of this chapter is that such changes can not be seen as the result only of changes within the UK .
3 One rather strange anomaly is that such intercourse is legal between consenting male adults over the age of 21 , but is illegal between heterosexuals and is punishable by a large fine or four years in prison .
4 The intimation is that such giants would likewise be serviced by global finance houses .
5 If we are to do this we must be clear what such skills include , and an advantage in having the librarian working in consultation with the planning team is that such questions can be asked and their proper inclusion sensibly planned .
6 One of the results of this difference is that such accents have different pronunciations for the two members of pairs of words that are pronounced identically ( i.e. are homophones ) in RP , e.g. ‘ won ’ and ‘ one ’ , ‘ nun ’ and ‘ none ’ .
7 The cold truth is that such captures are all too rare and it is a daily influx of petty offenders and successfully detected trivia that makes up the major part of the detective 's world .
8 For present purposes the point is that such passages , which because of the name ‘ Anchises ’ may seem Virgilian , are nothing of the kind .
9 The crucial point is that such expressions should be warranted by conceptual and communicative purposes recognized as having point in classroom activity .
10 In the same way , we should declare that we believe in the existence of God even when all the evidence is that such belief is absurd .
11 The nub of this criticism is that such views give rise to a kind of political paralysis : everything must wait until the revolutionary moment in which the production relations are transformed ; until then labour must play a purely oppositional role , a role which Precludes struggle of a ‘ prefigurative ’ kind .
12 If the first caveat is that these processes are at a relatively embryonic state , the second caveat is that such movements towards greater institutional self-reflection are liable to be arbitrarily arrested by external pressures .
13 While one argument against expecting schools to carry an additional load of knowledge is that such knowledge , particularly in the vocational field , rapidly becomes out of date , two arguments from the other side have some lasting weight .
14 One view is that it is the result of government parsimony towards prison staff ; the other is that such staff shortages as occur are due to the arcane system of rigid restrictive practices developed by the Prison Officers ' Association ( POA ) .
15 Although it may be beneficial to address this point at this stage rather than leave it to the flotation , the alternative argument is that such matters can only be decided at the time of flotation when the parties are better able to assess what is commercially necessary to achieve an optimum result .
16 While altruism by one individual towards another clearly involves some self-sacrifice , the tacit ( even unconscious ) assumption by the donor is that such sacrifice will , in the long run , generate reciprocal support .
17 The trouble is that such verities are no longer enough .
18 The theory is that such sub-contracting should not concern the buyer , because the seller still remains liable to him for the discharge of the main contract in accordance with its terms .
19 The implication is that such conflicts as there have been in the past were merely the result of misunderstanding .
20 The implication is that such problems will not be found frequently by analysts when carrying out data analysis and therefore that TNF will normally be a reasonable stopping point for normalisation .
21 Those who are ‘ wise ’ may keep to one purpose , but the implication is that such wisdom is not allowed to exist for very long .
22 The rationale is that such behaviour may make life intolerable ; and that , if indeed it does , the offended partner is entitled to say that the marriage has broken down .
23 The rationale is that such children do badly in examinations and so their exclusion will improve the end product .
24 ‘ We believe the longer-term trend is that such MBOs will become an even larger feature of the corporate scene , ’ said Mr Toomey .
25 The reason is that such certificates might be regarded abroad as given after an official check of records .
26 The reason is that such sentences do not somehow occur alone , in limbo ; they occur as part of a more general theory .
27 The reason is that such clauses are not looked upon with favour either by the courts or by Parliament .
28 ‘ However , the reality is that such matters will only be successfully resolved when a greater degree of trust and cohesion has been attained as a result of working together . ’
29 Change is also implicit in the idea of polyfocal villages , since the suggestion is that such plans are produced by filling in properties between existing or earlier centres .
30 The answer is that such pressures do exist .
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