Example sentences of "be that many [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It may be that many employed people preserve themselves from anxiety and insight into their real selves by contemplating themselves at work ’
2 ‘ Tradition dies hard and it may well be that many zealous companions will go on quoting Syriac and Egyptian and perpetuating this extraordinary jumble of explanations , ’ wrote Canon Richard Tydeman , Grand Superintendent over the Suffolk province of Freemasonry , in 1985 .
3 It may well be that many local-authority accountants have no detailed working knowledge of school-based financial-management systems — to give them a very grand title for their current state of development .
4 A related problem is that many empirical studies use closing prices and , if the closing times differ between the spot and futures markets , the closing prices from the spot and futures markets will not be directly comparable and need not obey the no-arbitrage condition .
5 What is perhaps more disturbing is that many existing IT specialists do not appear to be aware of some fundamental principles involved in designing reliable , " user-friendly " and " environment-friendly " information systems .
6 The main problem with contraception is that many young women and men know about it , but they do n't use it .
7 The first problem is that many young doctors do not get an adequate training .
8 One of the great difficulties is that many young people find it extremely difficult to admit that they have a problem .
9 The effect of the Order is that many personal injury claims which used to be pursued in the High Court must now be brought in a county court .
10 The key issue that emerges is that many private companies do n't actually want what they ought to have , which is more long term loans and more private equity , and less overdrafts and their short term loans .
11 The result , he argues , is that many middle class children have never progressed beyond the ‘ pre-Oedipal phase ’ .
12 The trouble is that many other firms want to do the same , so the profits of the business will probably be lower by then .
13 One spin-off is that many feminist psychologists still identify themselves as lesbians ; half of the members of the Association of Women in Psychology , for example , are lesbians ( Basow 1986 ) .
14 A key consideration for the development of a spatial language interface to GlS is that many different groups of users exist within the spatial data-handling community .
15 No doubt we shall find out , but what seems to be true of this moment — 1989 , when photography has reached the 150 year point — is that many different kinds of photographic image-making co-exist and ore of equal validity .
16 An added benefit is that many different muscle groups can be trained , so that individuals with a wide variety of jobs and leisure-time activities can benefit from them .
17 The snag is that many local managers are refusing to agree to this concession .
18 Another reason is that many local authorities , as a matter of policy , accelerate their loan redemptions so that loans are repaid long before the end of the assets ' useful lives .
19 The first is that many important aspects of language processing occur in units that are larger than the single sentence .
20 The implicit complaint is that many British insurers would not have been saddled with these claims if US law and regulation had not been retrospectively changed .
21 The reason is that many everyday sounds — such as keys being dropped on the floor — contain ultrasonic frequencies and these can cause spurious operation .
22 A direct and obvious example is that many marine animals are dispersed around the globe by ocean currents .
23 Another argument used against the need to record assets values is that many public sector assets are not realizable .
24 What is often not realised is that many deserted settlements have interesting and largely unappreciated post-medieval remains as well , such as mansion sites .
25 The principal problem with the separation formula is that many significant innovations in seventeenth-century science were introduced with theological connections to the fore .
26 One reason for this is that many grammatical elements are themselves bearers of meaning — this is true , for instance , of the past tense affix — ed , and the plural affix — s .
27 What this example of structural bind illustrates is that many structural devices ( systems , hierarchies ) are a major cause of dissatisfaction .
28 The thing that I object to is that many old people and the disabled relied on taxis to get them into that area , and I would say that Hackney Carriage vehicles should be allowed in .
29 The result was that many deaf men were unable to obtain work .
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