Example sentences of "is that such [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 A drawback here is that such processes are limited in terms of the power of the grammars they permit .
2 The prime reason for this is that such warehouses have become machines and will only operate correctly if the logic for their function has been meticulously thought out , checked and rechecked .
3 Each of these has changed substantially in the post-war period , but the central argument of this chapter is that such changes can not be seen as the result only of changes within the UK .
4 The major television stations , in looking towards a mass audience , will inevitably focus on more dramatic events and issues in their depiction of the subject , and one 's only hope is that such depictions will be balanced and sensitively written .
5 The reason is that such sentences do not somehow occur alone , in limbo ; they occur as part of a more general theory .
6 The fact is that such breakages are very uncommon , and that the quoted figure of 2,000 tank-related accidents a year includes things like ruptures and hernias while trying to lift them …
7 The intimation is that such giants would likewise be serviced by global finance houses .
8 What is essential , he feels , is that such skills become a natural part of a player 's working life — not that the children are given a ‘ treatment ’ as the result of a dislocated training package directed by those who do not really understand a musician 's mind or motivation .
9 One is that such policies produce an extension of economic freedom and , thereby , political freedom .
10 For present purposes the point is that such passages , which because of the name ‘ Anchises ’ may seem Virgilian , are nothing of the kind .
11 The problem is that such transformations are seldom perceived whilst they are occurring ; they are usually identified long after the event .
12 All we really claim is that such models may be useful in helping managers assess how much the value of the firm might be increased through investment in alternative locations on the portfolio grid .
13 The cold truth is that such captures are all too rare and it is a daily influx of petty offenders and successfully detected trivia that makes up the major part of the detective 's world .
14 One point that must be borne in mind is that such maps can not be produced using Landsat MSS or TM data alone .
15 A corollary of this is that such industries are far from simple to understand and hence they demand experts both to run them and to explain them to the general public , e.g. microelectronics , nuclear stations , oil refineries , etc .
16 The response of the companies is that such prices are necessary to recoup the costs of R&D , and to compensate for risk , since only a small proportion of R&D generates innovations that are commercially viable .
17 The reasoning here is that such goods are only capable of being identified through defining their characteristics .
18 The first sign that you are making real progress in learning to fly is that such mishaps become rarer and , eventually , uncommon despite the model not having been changed in any way .
19 The nub of this criticism is that such views give rise to a kind of political paralysis : everything must wait until the revolutionary moment in which the production relations are transformed ; until then labour must play a purely oppositional role , a role which Precludes struggle of a ‘ prefigurative ’ kind .
20 Change is also implicit in the idea of polyfocal villages , since the suggestion is that such plans are produced by filling in properties between existing or earlier centres .
21 A common factor in the strategic planning of information services in many outside organisations is that such plans derive from , and constantly refer back to , the organisation 's business or scientific objectives .
22 The problem is that such accounts overlook the dialogue between established and innovative science .
23 The presumption is that such agreements are contrary to the public interest , and the onus is on the parties to the agreement to demonstrate that a particular agreement is not .
24 If the first caveat is that these processes are at a relatively embryonic state , the second caveat is that such movements towards greater institutional self-reflection are liable to be arbitrarily arrested by external pressures .
25 The implication is that such conflicts as there have been in the past were merely the result of misunderstanding .
26 The reason is that such certificates might be regarded abroad as given after an official check of records .
27 What is surprising , however , is that such stories are told using the same , or very nearly the same , language .
28 Although it may be beneficial to address this point at this stage rather than leave it to the flotation , the alternative argument is that such matters can only be decided at the time of flotation when the parties are better able to assess what is commercially necessary to achieve an optimum result .
29 ‘ However , the reality is that such matters will only be successfully resolved when a greater degree of trust and cohesion has been attained as a result of working together . ’
30 The implication is that such problems will not be found frequently by analysts when carrying out data analysis and therefore that TNF will normally be a reasonable stopping point for normalisation .
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