Example sentences of "view that the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 That model was consistent with the view that the only factor in the equation which was not reasonable , constant and satisfactory was the pupils .
2 Supporting evidence for the view that the right hemisphere may participate in the recovery from aphasia comes from findings obtained with the regional cerebral blood flow technique ( Meyers , Sakai , Yamaguchi , Yamamoto and Shaw , 1980 ) and from studies of dichotic listening performance which have shown a disproportionate increase in the left ear score with recovery ( Pettit and Noll , 1979 ) , at least among certain categories of aphasic patient ( Castro-Caldas and Botelho , 1980 ) .
3 The other bearers took the traditional view that the right thing to do was for Yussuf to get rid of her and find another one ; but for reasons known only to himself Yussuf was reluctant to do this .
4 The more pejorative epithets have disappeared in the post-colonial literature , except for one or two extreme examples like Kon Muang Nan ( 1978 ) who holds the view that the shifting cultivation practised by tribal people in northern Thailand is the most dangerous national problem and one which undermines national security .
5 The members of the court ( Lord Denning M.R. , Shaw and Brightman L.JJ. ) all took the view that the Criminal Justice Act 1967 and the Local Review Committee Rules 1967 ( S.I .
6 I myself take the view that the criminal justice process generally is the appropriate way to deal with criminal offending and I 'm not too happy with the idea that people who commit criminal offences should be dealt with outside the courts .
7 All of those factors lead the City Council to the view that the current level of residual given emerging government advice , the City Council could no longer support the idea of a new settlement of something like fourteen hundred dwellings set in the countryside beyond the outer edge of the York greenbelt .
8 ‘ There is a widespread view that the current rate is indefensible and that we will suffer great damage if we continue to attempt to defend it , ’ he said .
9 Within education there has been the long standing view that the individual teacher is the key resource to developing and delivering a high quality service .
10 Both sections 12 and 14 allow the senior police officer to impose conditions only if he ‘ reasonably believes ’ that the stipulated events will occur , and the Government White Paper expressed the view that the new law would ‘ ensure that demonstrators have an effective means of challenging any decision by the police to impose conditions which is not justified by a real risk of serious disorder , disruption or coercion . ’
11 One of the signs of the eclipse of classics by English was the foundation in 1907 of the English Association which was to propound very effectively the view that the new discipline had become " our finest vehicle for a genuine humanistic education " and that " its importance in this respect was growing with the disappearance of Latin and Greek from the curricula of our schools and universities . "
12 But Nigel did take the time to explain that b that basically this was the , the , the view that the new directive would take place keeping it simple .
13 Oakeshott rejects the view that the Hobbesian conception of sovereignty entails absolutism or despotism ; it is simply a logical necessity .
14 It has expressed the view that the increased sophistication of stockmarket capitalisation throughout the Community will lead to growth in takeover activity and that the liberalisation of capital movements throughout the EC will further encourage the inter-action of national capital markets , thus giving companies easier access to finance for takeover activities .
15 In recent years , there has been some return to the classical view that the real wage is too high and that unemployment is ‘ voluntary ’ in the sense that it is caused by workers refusing to accept wage cuts .
16 Although journalists are ‘ the people who operate much of the power of the press as usually understood ’ and they can exercise a measure of freedom in their choice of stories , anecdotal evidence supports the view that the real power within the press is rarely ‘ shared between its owners and the journalists ’ .
17 Evidence about the patterns of gaze which speakers normally adopt thus supports the view that the hesitant phase of speech is one in which planning of current and following utterances ( within the same cycle ) is carried out .
18 First , there was a widespread view that the overwhelming lesson of the war was that military force could no longer achieve its objectives .
19 The document , being unveiled this afternoon , challenged the Government 's view that the present level of spending on pensions is unsustainable .
20 The alternative view that the intestinal lymphoma developed as a primary event two years before presentation seems possible in view of the indolent nature of the disease and subsequent findings .
21 This can be taken as evidence to support their view that the political system is now subverted by the relationship between the military and the corporate sector .
22 The most likely explanation is that these creatures are a form of large sea-cow , though monster-watchers around the world still hold firmly to the view that the ancient loch is home to a family of plesiosaurs , a remnant of the Mesozoic era .
23 But speaking about the possible loss of a new community centre , she added : ‘ The parish council have reluctantly taken the view that the Junior School is paramount at this time but , should land values improve by the time the site is actually sold , the community centre should still be a possibility .
24 It has also been suggested that there were many signs available to Mrs Whitehouse that , in her terms , all was not well within the Church , and that this reinforced her view that the established order was under threat , and that urgent action was necessary .
25 The Council reiterates its previously expressed view that the existing system of local government in Scotland should be retained , that a convincing case for change remains to be made and that the cost , confusion and disruption involved in the proposed reorganisation is not justified .
26 I start with the view that the final responsibility for the future of the company depends upon the board as a whole , and therefore the direction in which the company is to be led is the unique responsibility of that board .
27 Some have taken the view that the increasing centralisation of policy control by government , and the devolution of responsibility to schools and colleges , accompanied by a range of alternative provision such as grant-maintained schools and city technology colleges , has all but made LEAs redundant .
28 Does my hon. Friend accept my view that the Labour party would really like tied workers living in tied cottages ?
29 As long as they know what kinds of acts or events might be prosecutable , they take the view that the arcane business of the law is best left to senior staff .
30 Few historians would now wish to dissent from the view that the vast majority of the laity of fifteenth-century England were deeply attached to the beliefs and practices of the Roman Catholic church , or to deny that that church exercised an unrivalled influence over the shaping of late medieval popular mentality .
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