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

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1 What you will not find , however , is that every individual Broca 's patient is lower on all six measures ( see , e.g. Berndt , 1985 ) .
2 The last major problem potentially caused by changes in Labour rules in 1980 is that every Labour MP must undergo a reselection process .
3 The fact is that every other gentleman there I can tell it 's a hairpiece , yours I could n't .
4 But the most shocking thing about this new black-humour novel is that every life-or-death horror story is true , says its author , consultant anaesthetist Dr Philip Keep .
5 The danger in exclusively privileging the socio-cultural context in the interpretation of human institutions and behaviour is that every social phenomenon becomes so context-dependent that it can not be translated across cultures .
6 Asked how he rates himself as a novelist , he replies : ‘ All I can say is that every single book has sold more than the last .
7 The theology of SPRED is that every human experience contains a hidden truth about God , His plan , His world and our lives .
8 If there is one certainty in a crisis , it is that every Tory MP will put party before country .
9 The difference is that a protected tenant has security by virtue of his contract with the landlord ; a statutory tenant has security by virtue of the protection given by the Rent Acts .
10 The result is that a complete flowchart of both wings of the Chemical Products business — which manufactures up to 800 different specific chemicals — strongly resembles a bowl of spaghetti .
11 And the feeling in Washington is that a great pile of it is lying around ( under the name of Noriega M. ) at banks in London .
12 But the point is that a great variety of inputs and outputs are employed and interact with each other .
13 As I think Mr Gillett already suspects , the truth is that a great part of the Willesden Green library stock was sacrificed on the altar of Community Librarianship .
14 The major disadvantage with audio recorders is that a great deal of contextual information is not recorded and therefore , unless some other method of recording the context , such as note-taking , is employed , it may not be possible to recover a ‘ rich interpretation ’ of the child 's language .
15 What must be clear in a transcript of this kind is that a great deal of interpretation by the analyst has gone on before the reader encounters this ‘ data ’ .
16 My problem is that a great deal of business needs to be done , and I have to try to accommodate that business as well .
17 The theory is that a strong culture , good two-way communication , cooperation and motivational leadership will ‘ eliminate ’ conflict .
18 Another advantage is that a hooked bream can be persuaded — with a little not-too-gentle pulling and guidance — to fight it out in the shallower water and therefore not disturb the remainder of the feeding shoal .
19 One of the inherent weaknesses of the modern squad system is that a close-knit clique becomes impervious to failure and criticism .
20 What happens , I believe , is that a Federal institution like the FRCN tends to report Federal Government news more often and thus leans towards support for the NPN 's view of things .
21 The main conclusion to be drawn from this discussion is that a software-based System gives detailed control of the velocity profile up to medium stepping rates ( 1000 steps per second ) , but may limit high-speed performance , and is therefore well-suited to applications in which acceleration/deceleration operations predominate .
22 An objection to this argument is that a legal obligation is not a necessary condition for a liability .
23 The reason behind all of the red tape even under normal circumstances is that a legal process is being implemented .
24 And so the point I 'm making is that , is that a modern insight into Darwinian evolution is based on a wholly scientific basis and social Darwinism may have got Darwinism a bad name by associating it with slogans like survival of the fittest , but modern Darwinism er is n't like that .
25 The assumption made in empirical studies is that a selective excise is passed on fully , and that there is no change in factor incomes , which in the present context means , and .
26 The reason they were picked ( aside from those who are here by right of birth ) is that a small portion of their total brain power was visibly alight at the right time and in the right place .
27 Thus the new reality is that a small group of people substitute themselves for the class as a whole and decide what is best for all .
28 My understanding is that a small group need not prepare a consolidated cash flow statement , even if the holding company of that group prepared group accounts .
29 The problem with recruitment is that a small amount of initial effort produces a great deal of work , and this work proceeds in waves which produce severe fluctuations in activity for the personnel staff involved .
30 The second point is that a small energy input into the thermostat can release a large quantity of energy from the boiler .
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