Example sentences of "it [be] [adv] clear [that] [ex0] " in BNC.

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1 While Treitschke demonstrates how economic union in the Zollverein finally led to German unity under Prussian hegemony , it is not clear that there was necessarily any kind of secret agenda from the outset , rather , the natural pre-eminence of Prussia combined with other historical events beyond her control .
2 It is not clear that there was uniformity across the whole of the Merovingian kingdom in such matters .
3 Yet despite that , even in the 1950s neither the Conservatives nor Labour ever obtained an absolute majority of the votes , and today it is even clearer that there is no one majority party in British politics .
4 Nevertheless , it is also clear that there is scope for increasing the agricultural production of the crofts .
5 It is also clear that there are many in Bonn who believe that a tight union should be created at the centre of the EC , creating a two-speed Europe with a powerful core .
6 However , it is also clear that there are impersonal images of God in these traditions .
7 It is also clear that there was a great deal of support for the old church throughout the country , and particularly from the gentry elites of provincial England .
8 It is also clear that there have been long-term shifts in priorities as the cuts became permanent .
9 At the same time , it is also clear that there is not a strict and invariable relation between war , particularly defeat in war , and political revolution .
10 It is also clear that there are highly specific ritual constraints of a universal , or near universal nature for example , nearly all cultures seem to have greeting and parting routines ( see Ferguson , 1976 ) .
11 It is abundantly clear that there was no enthusiasm amongst the English nobility for a renewal of war , and the triumphant campaign that now ensued was prepared by the king himself and a small group of his military supporters , notably Henry Percy of Alnwick and William de Clinton .
12 The detailed lineage of blood cells is not fully worked out but it is quite clear that there is , with successive cell divisions , an irreversible commitment to one or other general pathway .
13 It is quite clear that there is a major shortage of trained manpower in computer science in the US , which is threatening the technological progress of that country and the brain drain from India is helping to mitigate this problem . ’
14 He said : ‘ So far as the question of Ministerial rules goes , it is quite clear that there was no breach whatsoever , and I deeply resent the suggestion that there was . ’
15 It is quite clear that there was nothing in any way divine about Cortés .
16 If we move away from the national level to consider the smaller local communities , or particular institutions such as factories and offices , colleges and schools , it is quite clear that there are no problems of either size or communications which stand in the way of their being governed according to the principle of direct participatory democracy .
17 However , it is quite clear that there will be major difficulties for travellers in Scotland .
18 As shown in Fig. 4.2 , it is quite clear that there is no privity of estate between S and either L or L2 .
19 In the particular case of public sector firms ' management constraints/rewards , it is fairly clear that there is room for improvement .
20 It is then clear that there is no determinate outcome to majority voting ; it depends on the order of voting between high ( H ) , medium ( M ) and low ( L ) .
21 It is now clear that there are very few towns which just grew because they were at suitable locations .
22 It was also clear that there was in general an imbalance between the time employed and the labour requirements of the enterprises , indicating a lack of skills and a need for extended training .
23 His historic speech at Harvard University on June 5 , 1947 , came at a time when it was increasingly clear that there was a fundamental imbalance between the US economy , which had emerged bigger and stronger from the war , and the destitution of Europe .
24 Yet , despite Mrs Thatcher 's resolutely ‘ gung-ho ’ attitude , it was increasingly clear that there had been a general shift in Britain 's stance on Iran and the whole of the Middle East .
25 For instance it was pretty clear that there were no unique memory molecules .
26 It was fairly clear that there was going to be some smuggling as well but , even allowing for the often-repeated story that other ships lay over the horizon and sent boats in to add to the stock on board the single ship , the net profits from the ship could hardly have been much more than twice those of the slave-trading .
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