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

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1 It estimates that if total development assistance were to double in this decade , as it did between 1977 and 1987 , the 4% target for donor countries remains adequate for population assistance .
2 Or does it mean that if total incomes rise by 4 per cent and total profits by 5 per cent , all profits are subject to a levy of one-fifth of their increase over the previous period ?
3 Welch believes that if regional theatres are to grow they will have to learn from his example , and seek the backing of local businessmen as well as the more traditional sources of commercial theatrical managements .
4 In addition it was felt that if regional studios were established as well as transmitters , these would be able to originate their own material for local transmission , which would help redress any cultural imbalance in programming .
5 The significant point here was that if four hours each week were devoted to the teaching of Science , the School would become eligible for a grant of £150 a year , under a scheme recently introduced by the newly-created Board of Education .
6 The agreement usually provides that if necessary consents have not been obtained , the contract or asset will not be transferred to the acquirer but the acquirer will perform the contract or enter the property ( subject to the terms of the lease ) as the agent of the offeree .
7 Jones further argues that if central government believes it can not or should not perform a particular public function , ‘ it would be better if it decentralised not to technocratic quangos but to directly elected local governments ’ .
8 To many it seemed clear that if liberal capitalism ( of the sort advocated by Disraeli ) were not to be swept away by revolution , the largely illiterate workforce must be encouraged to believe that their welfare would be protected by the new rulers — the powerful middle class .
9 In contrast to this , I wish to argue that if disabled people display psychological abnormalities , this is because they have been socialised into such traits as a result of the ways in which society meets , or fails to meet , our needs , and that the claim that such features are a consequence of impairment is itself an aspect of the oppression of disabled people since it misidentifies , and thus does nothing to overcome , the main source of psychological distress .
10 The main finding of this study is that if intestinal pseudo-obstruction develops in patients with amyloidosis , the clinical features are considerably different according to the chemical types of amyloid protein .
11 However , many recognise that if Religious Education is to hold parity of status with other areas of the curriculum it must be open to assessment which is an integral part of the teaching and learning process .
12 Miliutin pointed out that if 125,000 men were enlisted annually but required to serve for no more than seven or eight years , in seven years the country would possess a trained reserve of 750,000 men .
13 What no one seems to have noticed is that if subliminal advertising worked , recall measures were to a significant extent irrelevant .
14 Hetherington ( 1979 ) found that if marital separation led to a cessation of hostilities and conflict , this seemed somewhat less damaging for children than remaining in a discordant , unhappy , but intact home .
15 Mr Heseltine complains that if Labour wins taxes will go up on everything but fresh air .
16 CITY share strategists believe that if Labour forms the next government , or leads a coalition government in a hung Parliament , investment sentiment will swing away from companies linked to the British economy in favour of those making the bulk of their profits overseas .
17 Similarly , the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science considered that if legal protection was given to the married woman 's earnings , she and her family would benefit : ‘ is it likely that a wife and mother will be less solicitous for the well-being … of her household ?
18 Senior officials have made it clear that if final decisions are not made by Friday , Chancellor Norman Lamont 's autumn statement on November 12 will not be ready in time .
19 Revelle and Shapero ( 1978 ) , for example , point out that if average cloudiness increases , the quantity of incoming solar radiation will be lowered , and the energy available to crop plants for photosynthesis will diminish .
20 This level of aggregate demand , Y , is the equilibrium level in the sense that if that level of output , Y , is actually produced each period then all that output and no more will be willingly demanded each period .
21 And that if that army did not come , the invaders would very likely prevail .
22 Does the Minister agree that if that issue came before the European Court of Human Rights , under the reasoning in the Dudgeon case , the court would almost certainly hold that it is contrary to the anti-discrimination article in the convention to have two different regimes operating within one country ?
23 It is not disputed by any member of the European Community that if that part of the directive were to be implemented everybody would have to pay for the associated benefits .
24 In the wild the importance of this mechanism is that it prevents a bird from becoming totally ‘ hooked ’ on one kind of foodstuff , so that if that type of seed suddenly disappears it is not left stranded .
25 Does he further agree that if that proportion were to be raised to 20 per cent. , overnight every household bill would rise by 50 per cent ?
26 But what I will say , " she added , her voice falling to little more than a whisper , " is that if that person does not step forward , it will go badly for all of you .
27 Sometimes , for example , a factor which is identified as the causal antecedent of an effect may be so interlinked with numerous other conditions that , while it is true that if that factor had not been present the effect would not have existed either , it is hardly illuminating .
28 I think our view is that if that provision was to be any greater , then we would have significant difficulty in accommodating that provision within our part of Greater York , primarily for for greenbelt considerations , not reasons , erm any additional provision would require a rolling back of the greenbelt , er significant provision would have two implications , erm either it would mean peripheral expansion er of York into the greenbelt around York and into our district , we feel that would adversely affect the special character of York , lead to outward sprawl of the York urban area , encroachment into open countryside , and coalescence of the urban area with the villages in our district , er and we we would n't want to support that .
29 And our concern is that if that figure is appro is is agreed or recommended by the panel or it 's gon na to be taken by the county that there is something in the order of a hundred and thirty hectares of employment land which is going to take investment from somewhere .
30 The tribunal then decides whether to issue an ‘ unlikely to succeed ’ warning to either party , the result of which is that if that party persists with the claim or a contention as part of a claim at the hearing , and loses , then costs may be awarded against that party .
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