Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] believe [conj] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 However , some experts believe that technical solutions are dealing only with the symptoms , not the causes of piracy .
2 This institute believes that some form of National Statistics Council has a role to play but with the following provisos : 1 .
3 Some economists believe that this kind of market mechanism is the most effective way of reducing pollution .
4 Some economists believe that most exporters are unprofitable at an exchange rate with the dollar of ¥115 or higher .
5 She had received a note that morning while breakfasting at ‘ Mon Repos ’ from Sir Charles Webb-Bowen no less , telling her that she would be called upon to speak third in favour of the motion : ‘ That this Conference believes that better public and press relations would enable Government and Party to get its message across to the public more effectively . ’
6 In a nationwide poll conducted in the second week after the massacre , the question was asked : ‘ Some people believe that this tragedy says something about the problem of male violence towards women .
7 The attempt was inspired by the work of the Logical Positivists in the 1930s , notably Rudolph Carnap , Carl Hempel , and Ernest Nagel , and prompted very many social scientists to believe that scientific method could be boldly distilled in diagrams like Figure 3.1 .
8 Some scholars believe that this story is more theological than historical .
9 In a King George 's Jubilee Trust report , The Needs of Youth ( 1939 ) , A. E. Morgan was another who brooded over ‘ a growing contempt by the young person for the procedures of juvenile courts ’ and the ‘ grave reason to believe that parental control is slackening ’ .
10 It may make for easier government and public convenience to restrict the tradition of marching and assembling for protest , but it would be a dangerous and a foolish idea to believe that public protest can somehow be laid aside as belonging to a bygone age .
11 The old regime believed that such accountability and planning ran counter to the culture of academic autonomy .
12 Authors of such reforms believe that greater diversity could be achieved by imposing restrictions on rules of ownership , by imposing levies on advertising revenue so as to create a pool of funds for alternative publications , and generally by controlling free-market forces .
13 Both the official and non-official élites believed that many charges were not true , but there was no agreement about the proportion of false cases , or about the number of crimes which were never reported .
14 One chief executive believed that such thinking was so important to his organization 's success in a high-tech field that he staged a highly imaginative top management meeting .
15 A few leading officials believed that free speech , human rights and other concepts embraced by the term ‘ democracy ’ were honourable in themselves , but mostly it appeared that support for democracy was based on promoting economic progress .
16 Mindful of recent events in Dakar , these officials believed that Allied interests would best be served by maintaining a working relationship with Vichy administrators .
17 Around the world , many cultures believe that any harm done to a dolphin may cause ill-fortune or sickness .
18 Although this involves the use of rather advanced techniques compared with the running of simple transfers and dubs , many enthusiasts believe that this type of editing is essential to the making of ‘ real ’ movies , and look on it as the key creative element in their video activities .
19 Many officials believed that these disturbances were prompted by needless interference with traditional society .
20 Many observers believe that this outcome would not have happened if BA had not been privatised as such a dominant carrier in the UK , but others argue that this claim is irrelevant and that world competition is what matters ; BA and BCal were both relatively small on the world stage , but might have been able to compete effectively in a merged form .
21 The influential work of John Bowlby has led many people to believe that any kind of mother-child separation during the first few years of a child 's life should be avoided .
22 Many people believe that voluntary bodies as they are today can not be entrusted with this national responsibility .
23 In the 1980s , among an entire group of paediatric anaesthetists , a substantial fraction believed that newborn children did not feel pain and therefore they did not give analgesics to newborn babies .
24 Regional terminals will also be developed although many critics believe that British Rail 's plans in this area are over-cautious .
25 Many scholars believe that this interpretation is not original and was not given by Jesus .
26 Many scholars believe that this miracle has the same root as the calming of the storm .
27 There is good reason to believe that these attacks were well justified , because after the defeat of the rising and Cade 's death , a commission , sent into Kent to investigate extortions there , held inquests in various parts of the shire between late August and late October 1450 .
28 All this encouraged many Burmese to believe that British interests were behind the assassinations .
29 Almost all Japanese believed that colonial rule in Korea should be extended for a very lengthy period , if not permanently .
30 But many environmentalists believe that that argument is simply a red herring .
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