Example sentences of "conclusion [that] [vb mod] be [verb] " in BNC.

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1 It is easy to imagine the conclusion that would be drawn : that the broken home had caused the child to become emotionally disturbed .
2 The conclusion that must be drawn is that corporate management in the large public company are not controlled by the shareholders exercising the powers accorded to them by law to appoint , dismiss and monitor the directors of the company .
3 The conclusion that must be drawn from reviewing such work is that there is no definite micro- or macro-explanation of the growth path for public expenditure .
4 As far as their usefulness as a measure of performance the conclusion that should be reached is that none is superior as we can only measure performance by comparison .
5 Perhaps the only genuine conclusion that can be made at this particular time of flux is that arts teachers are generally receptive to the introduction of new approaches to assessing children 's work , but only if these developments can be seen to have a positive value in helping children to be more articulate about their strengths and weaknesses , and are therefore essentially formative in character .
6 Downing street — there is only one conclusion that can be arrived at : that the citizens advice bureaux are right , because they live in the real world .
7 Another conclusion that can be drawn from this table is that , apart from the southern cone countries , those who work in the modern sector of the economy comprise a minority of the population .
8 The only conclusion that can be drawn from the above correspondence is that Stirling must have had some sort of operation in mind using parachutes during the period when he was returning from his second visit to Sirte .
9 A conclusion that can be drawn from all these treatment studies is that when dealing with patients who do not require inpatient care , treatment by well-trained non-medical staff ( social workers and nurses in. particular ) is at least as effective as treatment given by psychiatrists .
10 Indeed , if there is one conclusion that can be drawn from the first year 's experience of audit regulation , it is that so far there is insufficient evidence to judge the quality of the service registered auditors provide .
11 Whatever the answer to this may be , the general policy conclusion that can be drawn is that making access and use of medical services more equitable will reduce certain aspects of class inequalities in morbidity and mortality but will not do away with them or reduce them substantially .
12 The general conclusion that can be drawn from the evidence presented here is that regional policy has an improving effect on the employment and investment situation of development areas .
13 The only tentative conclusion that can be drawn from all these studies is that government financial assistance to strikers may play some minor part , not so much in starting , but in prolonging a strike , but it is an insignificant factor compared to the complex web of economic and political reasons that generate and sustain strike action .
14 The only conclusion that can be drawn , regrettably , is that under-resourcing is bad for quality control as well as being bad for quality .
15 The major conclusion that can be drawn from this analysis is that users are generally satisfied with the information they receive , but there is no doubt that confusion still exists as to the range of information providers available .
16 Still , it is sometimes possible to infer alterations over time , and one direct conclusion that can be drawn is that part , at least , of landlords ' rationale was economic : within a situation affected by such non-economic factors as pious donations , landlords organised estates and renders to maximise resources .
17 An important conclusion that can be drawn from the fiscal records is that the immediate effect of the Black Death in 1348–49 was slight in destroying communities , because most of the villages which eventually disappeared are still recorded as contributing to subsidies levied in the fifteenth century .
18 In doing so , one must reiterate that , as mentioned at the beginning of the chapter , one is anticipating a conclusion that will be reached in the following chapter , namely that the " Mustakimzade tradition " , for all its faults , is perhaps marginally less unsatisfactory than other accounts of the origins of the Muftilik , though as has been , and will be , seen , there is very little in the way of solid evidence even for it .
19 One conclusion that will be drawn from this principle is that gravitational fields affect electromagnetic radiation : light leaving a star is red shifted , and light passing near a star is deviated from a classical straight-line path ( Section 2.3 ) .
20 That the similar material produced under Æthelred may reflect badly , rather than well , upon his administration is a conclusion that could be applied to Cnut too .
21 Hubble 's conclusion was that the universe was expanding — a conclusion that could be described in terms of Einstein 's theory of relativity , which provided the mathematics for describing the ‘ fabric ’ of space .
22 A tentative conclusion that could be drawn from the discussion of platelet-function abnormalities in diabetics would be that the increased platelet reactivity may represent a prethrombotic state and contribute to the as-yet-unexplained increased vascular risk in these patients .
23 One obvious conclusion that could be drawn from the review is that the Japanese are steaming ahead with welldefined information technology plans .
24 The conclusion that could be drawn from this argument is that is not a phoneme of English , but is an allophone of several different vowel phonemes when those phonemes occur in an unstressed syllable .
25 The major one is that there is no way that the researcher can hope to be aware of , still less control , all the possible independent variables , and this casts doubt on any conclusions that may be drawn about causes .
26 The main conclusions that might be drawn from the study are :
27 There is no limit to the number or variety of different conclusions that can be reached at this stage in the process .
28 In the final article in our series , Richard Holloway reflects on conclusions that can be reached on modern society from the attitudes and opinions revealed in the course of the week Fighting the good fight
29 Vickery has written : ‘ Most of the conclusions that can be drawn from studies of people and information are either very general or specific to particular social groups , or even particular organisations . ’
30 The above comparison articulates two , related , conclusions that can be drawn from the evidence reviewed so far .
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