Example sentences of "[is] that [adv] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 A further possibility is that either the prestige or the style of the journals has altered over the study period , thus encouraging submission ( or acceptance ) of larger studies .
2 My respectful view , for reasons which your Lordships will have noted , is that both the contention of the defence and the court 's refutation of it were misconceived : the absence of consent on the part of the owner is already inherent in the word ‘ appropriates , ’ properly understood , and therefore the argument for the defence got off on the wrong foot and the counter-argument that the words specified by the defence can not be read into section 1(1) did not assist the prosecution .
3 The trouble is that both the product and the claims made for it are so unusual that it is impossible to predict whether it will disappear , never to be seen again , or become the biggest thing since MS-DOS .
4 The trouble is that both the product and the claims made for it are so unusual that it is impossible to predict whether it will disappear , never to be seen again , or become the biggest thing since MS-DOS .
5 He concluded : ‘ the cardinal rule of library stock control is that both the loan period and the duplication policy should be related to the level of demand for the title and to each other . ’
6 The drawback is that both the sender and the recipient , if living outside the US , are at the mercy of prevailing exchange rates and foreign banks may charge a commission .
7 The drawback is that both the sender and the recipient , if living outside the US , are at the mercy of prevailing exchange rates and foreign banks may charge a commission .
8 The drawback is that both the sender and the recipient , if living outside the US , are at the mercy of prevailing exchange rates and foreign banks may charge a commission .
9 My contention is that both the justice and inhumanity of capitalist societies result inevitably from the failure to assert certain absolutes and so place proper limits on the use of freedom .
10 One of the advantages of using drama in this way ( when the narrative continues over a period of several weeks ) is that both the teacher and the children can change roles , enabling us to look at any given topic from different points of view .
11 The thinning out process has been a great shock to me , I had a higher opinion of working class thought — but it is that where the weakness lies , not in our efforts of propaganda .
12 The result is that today a recording is seldom the transcription of a single musical event .
13 Finally , and perhaps most importantly , this account fails to explain why it is that the forms of state intervention have shown tremendous variability in capitalist economies and why it is that not every country had the same welfare and interventionist economic policies .
14 But the warning is that not every road is treated with salt — and even if it is , not every road is safe in icy conditions : and sometimes it 's even hard going for the experts .
15 The most likely interpretation of 16 is that not every part of the car underwent washing and polishing , but the exterior surface only .
16 The lesson from Butler is that not every document sent between the parties is in fact a counter-offer .
17 If top panel is without perspective and bottom is nothing but perspective , then is that not the place for a different kind of vision ?
18 I think that 's is that not the thing that 's worrying you , is that the question mark in your mind as well ?
19 The reason is that otherwise the surface charges would be in motion contrary to the assumption that a static equilibrium exists .
20 advertisement , and do they actually sit down in an interview or is that simply the way that the advertisement is projected
21 ‘ Hey , did you say something about buying me some lunch , or is that just an approach to win a girl 's confidence ? ’
22 The first is that however the decision is presented , one suspects that it represents a reversal of the previous commitment of the government to strengthening competition .
23 The difference between this and Helby v. Matthews is that here the customer was committed to making all the payments and therefore to acquiring ownership of the goods .
24 Misunderstandings have sometimes arisen from an unwarrantable belief that title deeds are sacrosanct documents , whereas the truth is that neither a conveyance nor a land certificate retains its value if the landowner is so indifferent as to lose physical control of his land .
25 The important point about the example , though , is that neither the instructor 's action nor the pupil 's action was required for the stopping .
26 Another very important principle also is that these erm the relationship between the ultimate good — G I call it — and these subordinate ones is non-linear as a mathematician would say , that is that nearly every virtue becomes a vice if you have too much of it , you see .
27 There 's lots of myths about Rachmanite landlords — is that really the case or is it one huge myth ?
28 One politically unfortunate aspect of the problem is that often the generator of the pollution is not the country suffering it .
29 One of the reasons for this , she explains , is that quite a lot of the small and medium-size firms in her area ( Hampshire , Dorset and Sussex ) do not want to recruit from the Big Six where most of the redundancies have been made .
30 His only explanation is that possibly the gentleman had travelled on the line for many years in the past and that his ghost fitted into a well-worn slot in time .
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