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

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1 In general , what the theory of dialectic materialism states is that every society is structured around its material basis of production .
2 The reason we receive massive newspaper publicity for reports like Empty Quarters and Nobody 's Home is that every property is illustrated .
3 What is remarkable is that a consensus is achieved by natural selection , and the neologism is usually accepted by most people fairly quickly .
4 The first is that a word is typically the smallest element of a sentence which has positional mobility — that is , the smallest that can be moved around without destroying the grammaticality of the sentence ( ignoring any semantic effects ) :
5 Suppliers The general approach is that a supplier is not liable under Pt I of the CPA 1987 for defective goods , but he may be liable in contract or negligence , or perhaps be criminally liable under Pt II ( discussed below ) .
6 And the latest news on the travellers movements is that a convoy is still moving along the A-forty-six between Cheltenham and Stroud .
7 Our response to talk of the birth of a daughter is that a daughter was born , provided of course that the talk and the child are separated ( that same device ) by a long period of time and a reasonable number of pages .
8 The difference is that a raga is improvised , Glass 's music is not .
9 If the normal trade practice is that a sample be subjected only to visual examination , there is no breach of s15(2) ( a ) if the bulk does not correspond with the same in some manner not discoverable by such visual examination ( Hookway & Co v Alfred Issacs and Sons [ 1954 ] 1 Lloyd 's Rep 491 ) .
10 One very obvious but important observation is that a pub is first and foremost an interior .
11 Wimsatt and Beardsley 's view is that a poem is not just a vehicle for conveying feelings , but an independent object with distinctive features of its own .
12 The reality is that a child is a time-consuming , all-engulfing creature who disrupts any semblance of pleasurable home life .
13 This belief , expressed in the legal doctrine of novus actus interruptus , is that a person is responsible for his own actions , and others are not responsible even if they induced his action by suggesting that there are reasons for it , or by behaving in ways which led him to form such a belief .
14 James 's aim is the psychological one of explaining how it is that a person is able to locate a stimulus on the surface of his body .
15 One reason put forward for this is that a person is more likely to lose their job in an area of high unemployment , and this lack of job opportunities must apply equally to wives .
16 The second observation is that learning is a " total " event in that is involves the entire person. , The third and most characteristic observation is that a person is constantly responding to innumerable influences , a few of which are conscious and rational , but most of which are either non-conscious or non-rational , or both .
17 An obvious problem is that a text is not made up of collections of sentences , but of sentences organised into a coherent whole .
18 What is unusual about " reading language itself " is that a text is self-consciously perceived , interpreted , explained as a tokening of a theory of language .
19 The most important point to understand is that a tutorial is an opportunity to share in the learning process : to share your ideas , experience , understanding and perplexities .
20 But the important thing to remember is that a map is a flat plan of an area — a sort of bird 's eye view made into a diagram .
21 The first is that a curriculum is not a plan but an experience , not a script but a play .
22 What you should try to remember is that a helicopter is essentially a frictionless device and , once moving , will tend to continue moving until an opposite command is given to stop it .
23 The fundamental difference between the two routes , then , is that a pronunciation is either built up from sublexical components ( ‘ assembled ’ phonology ) or looked up as a whole ( ‘ addressed ’ phonology ) .
24 If we just go back to , to what we 've just said and read the first paragraph , wh what he 's really saying here is that a revolution is taking place
25 What , what , what he 's saying is that a revolution is taking place here and it is , within a very short time it 's gon na spread on into other provinces .
26 The general opinion is that a bridge is necessary , though not a toll bridge . ’
27 Erm , the agency has considered a paper on this as is referred to in the final paragraph , what it 's basically suggesting to the Department of the Environment and the Home Office is , is that a formula is based upon the supply factors er , such as the , the number of fire stations and standard crew levels etcetera .
28 It is worth noticing , however , a consequence of this justification of clause 3 ; this is that a belief is not generally considered to be justified by the mere fact that it is true , for otherwise clause 3 would be unnecessary .
29 The view is that a consent is not valid unless the patient has enough information to make an informed choice .
30 The rule of thumb is that a model is a potential target if at least half of its base area if covered by the template .
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