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

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1 When you look at the way our railways are run , we can only be grateful that British Rail no longer owns hotels , particularly when you recall what a wonderful training ground the old British Transport Hotels used to be .
2 We should all be grateful that these monuments exist today as a guide and a help to biographical research .
3 We hold this truth to be self-evident that human beings are created unequal .
4 If the reading system does include these two separate processing components , it might be possible that neurological damage could impair one component whilst leaving the other intact , to produce a specific pattern of acquired dyslexia .
5 It might be possible that this rearrangement of the gene reflects differences in gastric mucosal structure and function between patients with gastric body ulcer and patients with gastric angular or antral ulcer and patients with duodenal ulcer .
6 It might additionally be thought to be undesirable that trivial assaults have to be prosecuted with an offence carrying the heavy maximum penalty of ten years ' imprisonment .
7 He is also believed to be embarrassed that one person should be earning so much when the recession and heavy unemployment has badly affected Coventry and the surrounding area .
8 From this description of the three categories , it should be clear that personal computing , where the user himself uses the system directly as a tool of the trade , is essential for categories ( ii ) and ( iii ) .
9 It should now be clear that Buid attitudes toward peace and violence can not be understood in terms of innate psycho-biological dispositions , or in terms of their adaptation of the natural environment .
10 It should also be clear that future investigations and policies must take account of class and gender and be sensitive to possible differences between minority black communities .
11 It will be clear that human religion need not in this sense be historical .
12 It will be clear that these judgments of normality are normative .
13 However , it should be clear that any firm which issues a guarantee must inevitably err on the side of over-zealousness , which will add to expense .
14 Your line manager will be sympathetic to all reasonable requests but you should be clear that special leave is granted at management discretion ; it is not and entitlement and is not an entitlement and is dependent on the needs of the business .
15 It must be clear that improved liaison between these parties will help , but this is only part of the requirement .
16 We must be clear that this occasion must be the exception and not the rule .
17 From the evidence presented above — and this is merely illustrative of the evidence available — it should be clear that corporate crime ought to be a prioritized concern because it is the more serious .
18 Pick it up unknowingly and you will quickly be convinced that 10-child families are a cause for celebration rather than concern .
19 That 's the problem with that attitude ; the doctor and the nurse and the hospital and everyone may be convinced that these problems are resolved adequately .
20 There is no general evidence as yet to link second home ownership with house price increases ( de Vane 1975 ) , but in local instances this has undoubtedly happened on a property-for-property basis , and it is easy to be convinced that dire housing consequences can come about for the ‘ traditional ’ rural population .
21 This , the waste of it , fuelled in her the indignation that kept her going , filled her mind with the thoughts that justified everything she did : one day , it would be impossible that fine people like Philip would be misused , kept down , insulted by circumstances ; one day — and because of her , Alice , and her comrades things would be different .
22 If however the desired labour supply exceeds that demanded , L D , the consumer is rationed on this market and utility is maximized subject to the constraint L s = L D ( the process of rationing is assumed to be such that each worker is employed for the same fraction of the desired L s ) .
23 ‘ If a person presenting or directing the performance is not shown to have intended to stir up racial hatred , it is a defence for him to prove — ( a ) that he did not know and had no reason to suspect that the performance would involve the use of the offending words or behaviour , or ( b ) that he did not know and had no reason to suspect that the offending words or behaviour were threatening , abusive or insulting , or ( c ) that he did not know and had no reason to suspect that the circumstances in which the performance would be given would be such that racial hatred would be likely to be stirred up . ’
24 So far as the performer is concerned , he has the defence that he did not know and had no reason to suspect that a programme involving the use of the offending material would be included in a cable broadcast , or that the circumstances in which such material was included would be such that racial hatred would be likely to be stirred up .
25 This is that within a structure X Y based on assignment , the surface realization of instances of qualification within X ( however many there may be ) will tend to be such that subordinate items will precede , and within Y such that they follow the item qualified , provided in each case that no further instance of assignment supervenes .
26 The arrangement of goods should be such that heavy items and liquids are kept at the lowest levels to avoid unnecessary lifting and to reduce the effect of spillage or container fracture .
27 Its system of display and retrieval must therefore be such that this kind of learning can proceed : that the individual user can , to a very great extent , progress himself through the various pathways to knowledge provided by the library , with the minimum of unnecessary difficulty and the maximum reinforcement .
28 However , there was considerable pressure for the terms of retirement to be such that older people could maintain economic independence .
29 But he might get the wrong person for his needs , possibly due to vacation , sickness , or the respondent may misunderstand the question , indeed , may well be unaware that certain information actually exists .
30 They may be unaware that some bureaux can arrange home visits .
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