Example sentences of "it be [verb] that more " in BNC.

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1 If it were found that more accidents occurred in the winter months between 6 and 8 o'clock in the evening compared with noon and 2 o'clock , is this because , during the early evening , lighting is worse , there is more traffic , drivers have been working longer and are more tired , or weather conditions are worse ?
2 But it 's hoped that more people will choose to have it .
3 It 's hoped that more cameras will be installed , financed by local businesses .
4 It is intended that more trains will be run and the season extended in order to increase business revenue from all possible sources .
5 It is said that more pigs are reared there than there are people in the entire country .
6 It is hoped that more attention will be paid in the future to their potential as counsellors in this new , demanding but fascinating field , and adequate resources provided for their training and practice .
7 It is hoped that more and more of the applications for renewal of approval will be such that they can be granted without any extensive dialogue on them being necessary , and indeed that many of them can be granted without any visit being made to the College by representatives of the Council or vice versa and without any special conditions being attached to the approval .
8 If it is decided that more relevant information for the balance sheet would be the plant 's replacement cost , then that entry becomes more subjective : different accountants might produce different replacement costs from different markets .
9 The new rule , which should have come into effect on 1 April , will now be brought in when it is felt that more companies can afford the 5,000 koruny ( US$160 ) needed to fit the device .
10 This can be seen to be in accordance with the Yerkes-Dodson law if it is assumed that more difficult tasks are those which require greater attentional capacity ( c.f. Kahneman , 1973 ) .
11 And it is believed that more than two-thirds of the entire population of seven million needs food desperately .
12 Other factors which influence the perception of risk include the degree of trust in the organisation ; familiarity and understanding of the technology ; the extent of involvement in the decision making process ; whether it is believed that more could be done to reduce risk ; comparisons with accepted risks ; and — last but not least — the fairness in the distribution of the risks and benefits .
13 Locally , it is estimated that more than half the 200 Health Authorities in England and Wales designated a responsible officer , and that there was a greater volume and variety of activity than ever before : traditional courses were supplemented by a new range of imaginative options , to which more managers than ever before had access .
14 The statement ends : ‘ It is expected that more people will visit museums as a result of the wider interest generated by the presence of an international art and antiques market here .
15 The use of the microphone by some students this year undoubtedly helped those students who lacked confidence in their ability to project their voices , and it is suggested that more students should try using the sound system to gain experience for the future .
16 This year it is anticipated that more requests than every will be made .
17 It is anticipated that more work will be undertaken in this area , resulting in a national framework of units suitable for use at advanced level .
18 It was hoped that more would be done by legislation to impose on local authorities a duty to consider , assess and intervene ‘ Where there are elderly people in need of some support or advice in order to prevent or postpone personal or social deterioration or breakdown — necessitating their removal to institutional care ’ ( Age Concern , 1986 , p. 128 ) .
19 For example , in the 1985 Green Paper on the future of the universities ( altogether a somewhat hasty and ill-expressed document ) it was suggested that more money should be given to universities , and more places offered to students , for sciences than for the arts , and this policy is now being implemented , with considerable effect on the schools .
20 It was agreed that more vigorous representations would have to be made .
21 It was agreed that more use should be made of this room — perhaps a kind of ‘ den ’ , but due consideration would have to be given to the Chess Club who , at the moment , are experiencing some inconvenience from the noise created by the youth club .
22 However , it was agreed that more thought could be given to ‘ specialist groups ’ .
23 b ) It was agreed that more Sector involvement was now being seen in the Programme .
24 Their cultural as well as their economic life could be broadened : in the winter of 1922–3 it was found that more peasant children from families owning draught animals attended school regularly than those without any .
25 In one study of a small group of wrist-slashers it was found that more than half were well , or had shown improvement , 5–6 years later ( Nelson and Grunebaum 1971 ) .
26 It was reported that more than IR£10 million has been permanently removed from the Group 's total cost base in comparison with overheads in 1991/92 .
27 Similarly , for spatial questions it was predicted that more correct responses would occur in association with eye movement to the left rather than the right .
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