Example sentences of "[noun] it is clear that the " in BNC.

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1 From the form of the Schwarzschild metric equation it is clear that the factor is an important measure of the effect of mass on the curvature of space–time .
2 From some angles it is clear that the Hammersmith building is a homage to Lloyd Wright 's spiralling Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan .
3 Despite these interactions , when correlations are calculated across the 48 films it is clear that the risk ratings in each case are strongly related to one another , r(46)=0.742 , p<0.01 , see Table 6.2 .
4 Applying Lord Bridge 's guiding principles it is clear that the first question to be determined in this appeal is what were the transactions which produced the profit to the taxpayer .
5 By comparing the history of Northern Ireland with that of the rest of the United Kingdom it is clear that the mere fact of elections is not sufficient .
6 And as a whole it is clear that the inter-war period saw Britain 's population increase , rather than decrease , as a result of migration .
7 From documents that I have been sent by the senior chief inspector it is clear that the total number of inspectors will be used as follows : 11 will conduct high-profile surveys and focus inspections , six will inspect schools at risk and another 26 will undertake inspections to supplement database evidence .
8 On initial inspection the curve in Figure 3.3 appears to show just such an inverted-U relationship , however , on closer scrutiny it is clear that the points which represent a downturn in the curve are not based on enough data to make them reliable .
9 Some examples of biological control have been referred to in section 4.4.3 in relation to Australia and in many instances it is clear that the introduction of alien species has proved ecologically disastrous .
10 Firstly , much of the research focuses on human embryos which raises ethical considerations hitherto unprecedented , and while such research is still in its early stages it is clear that the ability to manipulate human life itself requires well-defined and enforceable legislation .
11 In this case it is clear that the original excavators included only those coins which they deemed of sufficient importance for publication .
12 It is difficult to determine what proportion of these ships had wire rigging and which used the improved hemp but in any case it is clear that the West was largely won with better rope .
13 However in the Nayar case it is clear that the matrilineal organization of the Nayar taravad only makes sense when it is viewed as a part of the larger society which included the patrilineal organization of the Nambudiri and the military organization of the pre-British South Indian principalities .
14 In addition it is clear that the route by which information becomes public knowledge may be crucial to determining whether it thereby loses the necessary quality of confidence .
15 In these cases it is clear that the design developed by constant trial in practice .
16 They were closely linked with this , and in some cases it is clear that the growth or decline of a town resulted from economic changes in the surrounding rural area .
17 By adopting these principles and developing an integrated engineering records data base it is clear that the performance of a CAD system can be enhanced and the information generated used as the core of all downstream manufacturing operations .
18 From this brief description it is clear that the information derived from MRI is already significantly greater than that from most of the other imaging techniques .
19 From the complaints of British and French merchants it is clear that the colonial trade was ceasing to be a ‘ device by which was canalized , under royal control , the supply of goods from the rest of Europe ’ .
20 Choice of index technique It is clear that the changes to the indexes caused by even a very few additions mean a great deal of reading and writing of data into the index areas on disk .
21 From these examples it is clear that the acquisition of fundamental human characteristics does not occur instinctively ; indeed , such behaviour is predominantly shaped by an individual 's immediate social environment .
22 From these results it is clear that the use of the ‘ full window ’ produces better results than simply assigning a score to the final element of the transition .
23 On the one hand it is clear that the techniques of physical reproduction were still largely employed within the modes of general social and cultural reproduction .
24 In view of that letter it is clear that the Crown Prosecution Service do not seek to employ any of the material disclosed by Mr. Tully in compliance with the order of Buckley J. but of course the Crown Prosecution Service can use any material which the Crown Prosecution Service have already obtained and any other material which they obtain ‘ independently ’ of the present proceedings .
25 Granted what we know of the history of the city it is clear that the vast majority , as probably the similar multiplicity in many other English towns , were built between the tenth and the twelfth centuries , and that the multiplication of parish churches was especially characteristic of the eleventh century .
26 From this final expression it is clear that the concepts discussed above influence both the intercept and the slope of the curve .
27 In all his wanderings it is clear that the artist really preferred the Ambleside area .
28 From this post-Saussurean perspective it is clear that the theory of literature as expressive realism is no longer tenable … .
29 From the context it is clear that the secret , whatever it was , was of long standing . ’
30 In retrospect it is clear that the rejection of her work merely deepened her anxiety and revealed the beginnings of a persecution complex .
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