Example sentences of "it [is] [adv] clear that [noun prp] " in BNC.

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1 It 's immediately clear that Andrew does n't regret his slip from fame for an instant .
2 It 's quite clear that Heseltine and co will not implement the committee 's findings .
3 It 's perfectly clear that Peter made a spiritual takeover bid for his brother .
4 It is since clear that Lord Salisbury did not give his own views .
5 It is also clear that Lord Scarman was only considering the position of the child vis-à-vis its parents : he was not considering the position of the child vis-à-vis the court whose powers , as I have already said , are wider than the parents ’ .
6 It is also clear that Castro 's overriding concern with the security , both military and economic , of his revolution obliged him to conduct domestic policy with one eye on Moscow .
7 But it is also clear that Denning started off with a presumption that everyone involved was innocent and that at some stage he had personal doubts as to whether this was indeed so .
8 On the other hand , it is also clear that Robertson originally intended to word his order in such a way that some dissident Yugoslavs should be excluded from the hand-overs , and these he categorised as " Chetniks " .
9 At the same time , it is also clear that Leavis is not concerned with " extending " English in the manner of Newbolt .
10 It is abundantly clear that Mr Radice has two main objectives — to ensure that the Department of Health is required to give its reasons why a product licence for a medicine is granted , revoked , or suspended , and to ensure that patients are provided with better and more comprehensive information about the risks and benefits of the medicines that are prescribed for them .
11 And Harold Brookes Baker , editor of Burke 's Peerage said : ‘ It is perfectly clear that Charles and Diana are less and less comfortable in each other 's company .
12 It is quite clear that Rome did not have a policy on catholic schooling at this time , and certainly not one requiring attendance at such schools as a religious duty .
13 The commons also brought charges of corruption and extortion against Neville and a number of other courtiers and merchants , while Alice Perrers was accused of misappropriating the king 's goods and of bribery ; but it is quite clear that Latimer and Lyons were the principal objects of the commons ' hostility .
14 It is quite clear that God has not let his people go .
15 It is quite clear that Luke knew Paul personally , in a way that neither he , nor the authors of the other Gospels , knew Jesus .
16 Hence it is fairly clear that Cnut , who received the name Lambert at his baptism , was a Christian when he acquired the English throne , and the same was probably true of most of his major followers .
17 It is now clear that Tolstoy 's version of events rested on a fundamental confusion between what happened at Bleiburg and events which later took place elsewhere .
18 However it is now clear that Market Harborough is indeed a true ‘ New Town ’ .
19 Although it is now clear that Sutherland 's attempt to fit , indeed squash , corporate crime into his theory of differential association has not proved comfortable , and that his concentration on the economic as opposed to the physical and social effects of corporate crime made his study too one-sided , it none the less did , at the time , constitute a rich legacy to bequeath to criminology .
20 A good deal of this is false but it is now clear that Antony has a much better ‘ grip ’ on the crowd than Brutus has , as his language is simpler , clearer and more direct , his ideas are coming over to the crowd with a much greater force .
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