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

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1 Yeah , I would like to stay Leith , that 's where all the football fans are that support Hibernian .
2 In a sense it is all too easy in retrospect to see what it must have been that hurried Elizabeth to that early grave .
3 Only an idealized observer could see both the inner processing and the causal relations of the symbols to outside objects that give them meaning : no one could actually be that idealized observer , because each observer is confined to operating on the symbols that are within his computational machinery , and this excludes their external causal relations .
4 One of the benefits of making an acquisition has to be that duplicated positions can be eliminated , and NCR Corp has had to tell a total of 284 employees at two Teradata and two NCR locations in Southern California that they are surplus to requirements .
5 It used to be that causing trouble for the leadership was the surest way to a big NEC vote .
6 It may be that causewayed enclosures and henges of the Neolithic period were used in this way , and current ideas about hillforts suggest that they should also be viewed in this light .
7 ‘ It 's that crackpot Mark Lemon with his idea for a comic magazine .
8 The lesson to be learned is that taking time out of a fixed routine to stand back , and reassess the situation , is time well spent , and can create greater efficiency and productivity .
9 At present , the Commission 's thinking is that express services should be liberalised where this is not yet the case .
10 The main disadvantage of this method is that transferring divisions make neither profit nor contribution , so their motivation is poor .
11 A consequence of breaking new ground is that received wisdom becomes a poor guide .
12 I never dared to ask , but I understand now what it is that drives addicts back to the needle time and time again whatever the cost to their health and sanity ; I understand now what the mystics lay claim to when they speak of the peace that passeth all understanding .
13 Yet another attractive feature is that earthing XX' prevents stray capacitances to earth from interfering with component measurement .
14 Perhaps the more significant of the deals is that involving BSB , which launches five new channels in the spring .
15 Perhaps the more significant of the deals is that involving BSB , which launches five new channels in the spring .
16 ( What is less widely known is that Draize testing need involve only minimal discomfort ; the animals are under local anaesthetics and are humanely killed upon completion . )
17 The implication is that scanning systems should not be locked into continuous data on limited sectors of the environment … .
18 In the approach that follows , the inspirational , you can use the participative approach to find what exactly it is that you 've got in common and what it is that turns people on .
19 For you know I often wonder what sort of morality it is that keeps men from anything but superficial intercourse with any woman but their wives : yet I hate adultery & all the intermediate stages ; and what men of free habits in this way I have known , I have detested .
20 Well I do n't know who she is that sends letters out to your nana , but she 's bloody useless !
21 THE PROBLEM … in many large organisations is that getting information often takes too long .
22 The most important aspect , to my mind , is that finished work is often vastly improved and colour harmony easily achieved .
23 A problem is that mean values for fertility and survival probability decline with age , which may not necessarily be accounted for by a logarithmic transform .
24 The fear is that stretched resources have led to a reduction in places specifically for the most troubled children .
25 What is new is that lay people are being given ministerial training .
26 The approach to understanding organisations that concentrates its focus on people within organisations needs to be aware of what it is that motivates people within those organisations .
27 We have already examined the Human Relations approach to organisations , and this is a precursor to examining what it is that motivates people to perform within organisations .
28 Similarly , one of the few obviously valid arguments in favour of capital punishment is that executed offenders never re-offend afterwards .
29 The outstanding example here is that covering Westminster Hall in London , designed by Hugh Herland and built c. 1395 .
30 The second major observation is that mixed description types result in a low incidence of plural continuations .
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