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

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1 He suggests that gradual movements in share prices caused by insider dealing are preferable to the erratic jumps in prices brought about by enforced disclosure .
2 CAN ANYBODY be expected to take the Deputy Director of Wirral Social Services seriously when he suggests that feeding curry to toddlers will help them counteract the evils of racism ?
3 He suggests that such tendencies occur here as an overcompensation for the closed consciousness or ‘ dual narcissism , to which Fanon attributes the depersonalization of colonial man ; that ‘ it is as it Fanon is fearful of his most radical insights ’ ( p. xx ) .
4 He suggests that professional authority has three elements :
5 Moreover , far from generating isolation and introversion , he suggests that suburban living generates neighbour-liness , co-operation and collective action :
6 He suggests that climatic variations almost certainly influence personal behaviour and that specific types of weather can cause an increase in anti-social behaviour in many groups , ranging from schoolchildren causing havoc in the classroom to outbreaks of violence among those taking part in mass demonstrations .
7 Sambrook , on the other hand , sees greater efficacy in Goldsmith 's protest ; he suggests that this poet ‘ established the myth of rural catastrophe in its familiar form ’ and thus contributed to the development of English Utopianism among writers from Wollstonecraft to Ruskin who project a countryside humanized by fit housing and land reform .
8 He suggests that this conception of the state , together with the emergence of Rationalism in politics , has subverted the moral integrity of civil association .
9 He suggests that this restructuring gives a better intuitive ordering of the important concepts in each text , and enables a knowledge-based and context dependent strategy for making word sense selections .
10 For he suggests that parliamentary democracy is an egalitarian way of deciding certain policy issues , such as what the criminal laws of a community should be ( Dworkin , 1978a , p. 258 ) , and elsewhere , in respect of a more restricted class of ( moral ) policy issues , he has this to say : ‘ Under certain circumstances that issue should be left to democratic institutions to decide , not because a legislature or parliament will necessarily be correct , but because that is a fair way , in these circumstances , to decide moral issues about which reasonable and fair people disagree ’ ( Dworkin , 1981 , p. 208 ) .
11 He suggested that one reason his parents had talked so much about it was that ‘ they really were like oil and water , and the only thing they really agreed about was the ballet .
12 He suggested that each family type is linked to particular ideology .
13 He suggested that new species arise , not in the main centre of its ancestors , but in peripheral , somewhat isolated populations .
14 He suggested that Labour governments came to power only when there had been a radical change in the climate of opinion .
15 He suggested that extinct crocodiles found in the fossil record could have been transformed into their modern relatives when a modification of the environment triggered off the transition to a new growth pattern .
16 His confrontational attitude caused controversy , notably when he suggested that some ambulance personnel were little more than professional drivers .
17 He suggested that these proposals were contrary to the public interest and to justice .
18 He suggested that these fields are moulded by the form and behaviour of past organisms of the same species through direct connections across both space and time , a process he calls ‘ morphic resonance ’ .
19 He suggested that tidal forces resulted in the lighter continental crust ‘ ploughing ’ through the substratum of denser crust underlaying the oceans .
20 He suggested that ethical committees could be set up across the country to provide an independent source of advice for doctors and families , taking the matter out of the hands of the courts .
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