Example sentences of "[conj] there be [noun] [prep] [pron] " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 It sets out to show that there are comics for everyone from political exposes to baroque fantasies , from toilet humour to cartoon confessionals .
32 Now , you , you 're , that 's a subjective feeling , you do n't actually know that there are neurones in your blood sugar level , but you , you certainly know when you need something to eat and it , it 's a kind of subjective feeling and it 's not farfetched in the least to claim that our genes have rigged our brain in that way to do that because obviously we 'd like to have more reproductive success if you know when you 're hungry than when you do n't and it may be that a lot of , in a lot of other ways genes affect our , our behaviour through similar erm effects , that is subjective feelings we have , often of an emotional nature to make us want to do certain things and an an and dislike doing others , and it may be that we , we 're really kind of lumbered with that .
33 There is an increasing awareness that there are limitations on what can be assessed by formal written tests or examinations .
34 A common observation has been that there are soils in which some diseases never seem to occur and it is presumed that microorganisms that are antagonistic to pathogens naturally occur in these ‘ suppressive soils ’ .
35 At the same time , research evidence about how people view this in practice conveys a sense of boundaries : that there are limits to what one can reasonably expect relatives to do , and to what a person would want to rely on relatives for .
36 Government on these terms is tolerable if the party in power recognises that there are limits to what it is entitled to do . ’
37 This belief , expressed in the legal doctrine of novus actus interruptus , is that a person is responsible for his own actions , and others are not responsible even if they induced his action by suggesting that there are reasons for it , or by behaving in ways which led him to form such a belief .
38 But , yeah , I take your analogy that there are plays in which time , or the gods , or God sort things out .
39 First , that there are cases in which for no apparent reason legacy and trust seem to be used imprecisely .
40 We remember in particular from that section that there are conditions in which none of the steady state solutions is stable ; we left open the question of what happens then .
41 She considers whether it is true to claim that there is a sex-related divergence of views , and the possible reasons for any such divergence , and goes on to suggest that there are areas in which women 's views may typically differ from those of men .
42 Just to know that there are rapists around who could have been tracked down with this method is justification for a database .
43 Just to know that there are rapists around who could have been tracked down with this method is justification for a database .
44 He knows too that there are activities in which he is most intelligent when he is most spontaneous , in which to think may even be dangerous ; the ski jumper or the tightrope walker can not afford to hesitate and reflect .
45 They ca n't imagine that there are people to whom money is nothing .
46 Now the legal system always thinks that there are people around who should n't be trusted , and I think that 's right , and that 's what there 's laws for .
47 This caution is all the more necessary when we realize that there are varieties in which this change has not yet taken place , more than three centuries later , and that there are yet other varieties in which different changes have taken place .
48 A lot more sort of individual builders and self-employed people like me and Chas will be more aware of things like this and that there are alternatives to it .
49 My reason for mentioning queues , however , is that there are ways in which a human queue might be stabilised which are unlikely to operate among animals .
50 To justify his view that there are ways in which things might have been different while at the same time avoiding voluntarism , Poulantzas argues that there are two sources of valid counterfactuals .
51 Do not allow the civil service to say that there are ways in which it can not be done .
52 With regard to the first lies my group has come to the conclusion that there is a way in which the employment development budget can be augmented to specifically reserve at least the part of the current posish provision provided by the cooperative development erm we stand by our opinion that there are ways in which that service can be more efficiently administered that this is a sensible way forward .
53 Now , as a matter fact I do think that there are contexts in which species selection does make sense .
54 We all know that there are crimes for which the penalties go up to life imprisonment , but that does not seem to cover the point raised so eloquently by my hon. Friend the Member for Glasgow , Shettleston ( Mr. Marshall ) .
55 Michael Brunson tried a rude personal question , but by the time it had been translated into official interviewese — ‘ Would you accept that there are worries about your being in Downing Street ? ’ — it hardly sounded like a question , let alone a rude question .
56 It is not merely that there are portraits of him at every turn , for there are almost as many of Inglis , nor could it be claimed that he was the greatest lawyer , for he had many rivals for that title even in his own generation , yet it is beyond argument that he was the most influential advocate ever to walk the floor of Parliament House .
57 Mr Onanuga admits that there are aspects of his story which do not appear to add up .
58 People talk about how much of a shock , a wonderful shock , it is the first time you realise that there are places like ours that you can go , but for Boy I had the feeling that coming to The Bar did n't feel like that much of a change in his routine .
59 They are , moreover , a warning against complacency , their existence in our midst reminding us that there are quarters in which ( hard as it is to accept ) we ourselves would be considered foreigners , too .
60 His purpose was not only to prevent his own partisans from uniting to oust him , but also to use the fact that there were differences between them to strengthen his own position .
  Previous page   Next page