Example sentences of "[adv] argue that [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He rightly argues that the best way to find out what part of the brain does is to start out with very general questions about the sorts of thing it might do and then work through to more specific questions .
2 On Oct. 15 , 1989 , a controversial retrial of 15 Islamic extremists ( who had been associates of Bouiali-see above ) was abandoned after the defence had successfully argued that a regional court was not competent to try their case following the Supreme Court 's refusal to do so .
3 We have just argued that an important feature of research is its concern with the nature of the event under scrutiny .
4 Lenin once argued that a political leader is responsible not only for policy but for the action of those who execute it .
5 We have always argued that the main motivation for government funding of research should be wealth creation .
6 No one has ever argued that the Labour Party will be a panacea for Northern Ireland 's problems .
7 Some argued and some still argue that a low profile was more effective in meeting existing .
8 It is also argued that a production-based rent allowed the landlord to receive excess benefits due to the skill of the site operator .
9 Tonnies ( with his account of the transition from Gemeinschaft to Gesselschaft ) also argued that the emergent forms of society also continued new kinds of close-knit association .
10 They also argue that the latest draft of the charter , drawn up by President Mitterrand , has already gone a long way to assuage Mrs Thatcher 's legitimate fears about the loss of British sovereignty .
11 But , as Jessop shows , by insisting on the plurality of forces around the state and also arguing that the ruling class must always win out in any politics which flow from this conflict .
12 He also argues that the increasing fragmentation and differentiation of the rationalized lifeworld of modernity both takes the place of ideology and at the same time makes it difficult to sustain :
13 Boyle ( 1988 ) also argues that the new emphasis on public — private partnerships seeking to enhance business confidence and investment contains unfortunate implications for more depressed Scottish communities .
14 It also argues that the Conservative emphasis on family care ignores much recent research indicating that social changes are restricting the family 's capacity to care .
15 Bateson now argued that the direct study of variation was the only way of trying to understand how evolution actually works .
16 But it is now argued that the increased radiation would be no more than the existent difference between the poles and the equator .
17 It is often argued that the latter type of identifying references are really parasitic upon the former .
18 In favour of decentralization , they appeal to the doctrine of subsidiarity , and additionally argue that a supranational authority is likely to be unduly prone to capture by interest groups .
19 It is frequently argued that the political stability and rates of economic growth of the post-war period rest on the control of subordinate classes by the Mexican state .
20 It has been well argued that the great procession , headed by the Host and including the orders of the Church and social guilds , interrupted by the plays performed by the guild members reminding followers of the archetypal story of God 's plan of salvation from the Creation to the Last Judgement , provided opportunity for participating in that sense of unity beyond division which is the heart of Christian belief , and which underpins the social value put on the more isolated lives of contemplatives .
21 Bryden tentatively argued that the latter correlation indicated that in terms of dichotic listening asymmetry one is not dealing with something under genetic control " .
22 In fact , one can plausibly argue that the 1937 Mirror reader had just as much public affairs news as was available in 1927 .
23 I would strongly argue that the national negotiating machinery has , over the years , delivered low pay to such people .
24 It is sometimes argued that a full-blooded commitment to phenomenological principles entails a retreat into relativism in which the researcher is denied any grounds upon which to choose between alternative accounts of the same situation .
25 It is sometimes argued that an experienced programmer can detect the ‘ general shape ’ of a particular high-level language X from blocks of machine code , just by hunch and judgement , but this ignores the possibility that the code may have been written in language Y with the syntactic style of X precisely in order to create this confusion ; just as one can murmur English with a German intonation and cause a distant listener to believe he is listening to unintelligible German .
26 It is sometimes argued that the additional costs of disability are offset , to some extent , by the more limited range of social activities they can engage in , which produces cost savings for them .
27 It is sometimes argued that the main reason for allowing such matters as provocation to reduce murder to manslaughter is to avoid the mandatory penalty for murder .
28 My party has consistently argued that the real alternative for funding local authorities is a local income tax .
29 I have consistently argued that the primary school should provide children with an ever widening range of experience .
30 Alan Macfarlane has recently argued that the social pressure to enforce them was less strong in England than elsewhere .
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