Example sentences of "often [be] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Then , as would often be the case when the wind permitted , I opened the flaps and looked at the stars .
2 If a group income election is in place , as will often be the case , the dividend ( or part of it ) can be paid up outside the group income election in order to generate the required ACT .
3 Although any breach would be contempt of court , and could lead to the lifting of the Mareva injunction , the information will have been obtained and can still be put to use in another State ; and the sanctions available are much reduced where , as may often be the case , the plaintiff is not resident in the jurisdiction of the English court .
4 The prospect of increased future earnings will also have no impact where a manager plans to leave the employment market , as will often be the case with chief executives who may be in their final period of office .
5 Where the prosecutor relies on a continuing course of conduct , as will often be the case with offences under this section , a claim that the actor had failed to advert to the consequences that his conduct was having will lack plausibility .
6 This benefit is not available if , as will often be the case , Newco is a close company ( see s13A and Sch 4 para 10 TA 1988 ) .
7 If , as will often be the case , you are in a country area miles from London , Birmingham or Manchester , the cost of training can prove a severe burden on a practice .
8 erm I think that must often be the case .
9 Such deviations will often be the clue to special interpretations associated with traditional figures of speech such as metaphor , metonymy , synecdoche , paradox , irony If such tropes occur , what kind of special interpretation is involved ( eg metaphor can be classified as personifying , animizing , concretizing , synaesthetic , etc ) ?
10 The day care centre can often be the link to other agencies when special needs are identified .
11 Mustill LJ said in Parmenter that , although the two offences are seen as different by defendants and lawyers , the mens rea is the same : If the Cunningham subjective test combined with the low level of intent prescribed by Mowatt is applied to s.47 in the same way as s.20 , the moral overtones of the two offences become indistinguishable , and the differences between the two depend upon variations between the levels of physical injury which may often be the result of chance .
12 Of course , the relevant question here will often be the extent to which the caveat emptor doctrine has been abrogated through legislative intervention in contracts of supply ( see Chapter 5 ) .
13 The other person will often be the employee of the defendant , as he was in Tesco Supermarkets Ltd. v. Nattress ( 1971 ) H.L. ) .
14 Single-mothers can often be the target of unfavourable press attention in which single-parenthood is associated with ‘ welfare-scrounging ’ .
15 Underlying this scientific calm will often be the interplay of personalities and politics .
16 The fact that parents are trying to keep an emotional secret from the child can often be the root cause of the problem .
17 The smallest detail can often be the difference between a good and a bad picture .
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