Example sentences of "[that] [pron] is [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ But — do n't you realise that nothing is any good unless it is shared ? ’
2 Mr Blair-Gould said : ‘ The prosecution clearly suggest … that she is some kind of dreadful rebel on a crusade against censorship . ’
3 That is , we initially categorise them as this or that type of person and interpret or distort subsequent information to confirm that s/he is this type of person .
4 ‘ It appears , as a general finding , that there is much cynicism amongst primary school teachers about the possibility of innovation in curricula when teaching is under its present constraint .
5 Hirst admits that there is much difficulty ahead :
6 Not that there is much chance of prosecution .
7 My hon. Friend will be aware that there is much disquiet in Warwickshire and elsewhere about the standard spending assessment and the result of the revenue support grant — At least I get support on some occasions from Labour Members .
8 This is doubly difficult in that there is much overlap in terminology and concepts and specialists are not consistent with each other in the use of these new terms .
9 Not that there is much traffic .
10 But the total field is so underdetermined by its boundary conditions , experience , that there is much latitude of choice as to what statements to re-evaluate in the light of any single contrary experience .
11 The library guide may be described as the more passive approach to library orientation , and in spite of the fact that there is much uncertainty about their value most university and polytechnic libraries produce one or more .
12 The Act goes no further than requiring that , where there is disagreement over accuracy , the fact that there is such disagreement must be recorded .
13 That there is such variation is clear from Table 17.1 .
14 Mr. Marston may be correct in submitting that there is such material .
15 I have to have regard to the fact that there is another statement after this one and that there is such pressure on the debate on the Gracious Speech that I shall have to impose a 10-minute limit on speeches .
16 At present , I do think that there is that kind of willingness to be er , engaged in this kind
17 I think the interest that people have in those areas show that there is that hunger for a deep personal kind of faith , which they do n't usually find when they worship in the churches .
18 Would he really go up to Lorna and tell him that there is that paper cos Lorna wo n't
19 that there is that sort , kind of , everybody keeps in touch with everybody else erm
20 that there is that fear , that is because that is the second World War this is why the erm the er late thirties , early forties was never gon na succeed , because they had two completely different archaeologist , plus now in their purest form their not that but in the they were , they were never going to work , I mean that is the fact that their communists , the sole reason they 've been against each other for a hundred and fifty years there is no other reason
21 What emerges from the survey as most worrying for the Government is that there is little support from even its most natural supporters for some key policies , like the privatisation of water and the railways .
22 Most FRES members support this view , saying that there is little evidence of discrimination against candidates who have been made redundant .
23 It may well be true that there is little evidence of a widespread parochial anti-clericalism in the early sixteenth century , if by that we mean an endemic lay hostility towards the local priesthood .
24 In her review Cohen argues that there is little evidence in favour of the absolute specialisation models and points out that , as regards the nature of hemispheric specialisation , differences between the two halves of the brain have been conceptualised in terms of specialisation for different types of material , specialisation for different processes and specialisation for different stages of processing .
25 Diamond and Smith ( 1982 , 1984 ) and Diamond ( 1985 , 1987 ) have argued that there is little evidence that all students not admitted to their first-choice institution will be prepared to substitute an alternative institution particularly if this is one from a different sector .
26 He suggests that there is little evidence that any British Government ever managed the unemployment rate simply with a view only to winning the next election .
27 ‘ The point , ’ said McInnes , drawing the meeting to order , ‘ is that there is little change in basic share prices , unless a real story hits the wires .
28 There is also some evidence to suggest that there is little variation by social class in the amount of practical support given and received .
29 The political process in such an organization is made even more difficult by the fact that there is little communication .
30 They claim that there is little communication with general practices in some areas and that the system for calling patients is sometimes inadequate .
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