Example sentences of "clear from [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 It is not clear from the surviving reports of the Once-Over system if the manufacturers had much evidence to support the claims they made for the CO process .
2 It seems clear from the surviving images that emperors took interest in and approved the form of their portraits , particularly those that would be seen by many of their subjects on coins and statues set up in public places .
3 That collectors not speculators are driving this market was also clear from the strong prices made by many works on paper .
4 It should be clear from the preceding chapters that the Free Presbyterian Church is no ordinary evangelical sect ( using that term in its sociological rather than pejorative sense ) .
5 As must now be clear from the above descriptions of possible sources of documentary data , the social researcher has tremendous resources that he can call upon for use as primary data .
6 It is clear from the above figures that the Liberal Democrats get a rotten hand at each game of election poker and it is high time the system was changed .
7 It is clear from the above examples ( and from many others ) that we have to describe the speech community in depth and in its own is to say , our conclusions about phonological structure must be accountable to , and ‘ warranted ’ by , the data .
8 Lord Justice Scott said that , although on the face of the inspector 's covering letter the assessments appeared cumulative , it was clear from the individual assessments and the terms of the letter that only one sum would be assessed on whichever basis was ultimately appropriate .
9 It will be clear from the foregoing paragraphs that the maintenance of quality in all its aspects is central to the University 's aims in every area of activity .
10 Nor was it clear from the 1538 injunctions whether the offending images should simply be removed or totally destroyed .
11 While little data is presented here it is clear from the few examples given that the ANLT has problems with ‘ real ’ language — the number of possible parses produced and the failure to parse — which would not be solved by additional computational power .
12 It should be clear from the previous chapters that although I still had some sense of personal identity when I became anorexic , I simply did not have the opportunity or know-how to form an Eriksonian ego identity .
13 This point has been shown again and again ; it is clear from the excellent descriptions of production activities which we have of peoples such as the Tikopia of Polynesia described by Firth [ 1939 ] or of the Bemba of Africa by Audrey Richards [ 1939 ] .
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