Example sentences of "[is] [conj] [pron] [adv] [verb] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The down side is that we probably have the toughest Xmas/New Year you could image ( excluding Crewe ! ! ) .
2 Yet the paradox is that we only use the word hypocrisy when we have reasons for believing that we have found the thing itself .
3 What is strange is that we often accept the opposite : that large benefits naturally carry with them large risks .
4 The pity is that they always kick the wrong person . ’
5 While Diana has been billed as the matchmaker in this royal romance , the truth is that she never noticed the romantic spark between her brother-in-law and one of her best friends .
6 The first is that you always use the name of Pip .
7 Now what I recommend is that you always use the F version of any of these diagnostic test statistics and we can go on to look at the others erm in a moment .
8 The good thing about cruises is that you always have the ship 's staff to help you if you have a problem and there are always guided tours laid on at every port of call .
9 The difficulty with this direct form of government is that it rarely survives the death of the caudillo .
10 The reason why the present government nevertheless eventually sanctioned this book is that it mainly covers the war years , when the secret services were inevitably more widely tolerated than at other times .
11 But from what little I do know of it , my understanding is that it basically dramatises the same power relationships , and so seems to appeal to the same inequalities .
12 The first is that it now seems the £200 must all be for personal injury or death and not just include such damages .
13 A significant aspect of her work is that it always broaches the boundaries between the traditional disciplines of philosophy , psychoanalysis , literary , and art theory ; the implications it holds for each are touched on by the essays in this collection ( for instance , Ainley , ‘ The Ethics of Sexual Difference ’ ; O'Connor , ‘ The An-Arche of Psychotherapy ’ ; Minow-Pinkney , ‘ Virginia Woolf : ‘ Seen from a Foreign Land' ’ ; and Burgin , ‘ Geometry and Abjection ’ ) .
14 The most obvious of these is that he frequently quotes the Old Testament .
15 To this question , the common answer is that he neither quoted the forged additions nor produced them at Rome , because he knew they were forgeries , and knew also that the forgery would be detected at once by a competent critic .
16 They are said to be his own work , although the truth is that he probably has the final say .
17 ‘ The great thing about him is that he always wants the ball and always wants to use it .
18 my o my own personal view is if we just pay the fifteen and it 's sort of off in there straight away and then spend but not to sort of say , well you can spend it and update it ca n't you ?
19 This property of superposability both enshrines the pure mathematician 's abstract concept of what a vector space is and it also provides the perfect way in which to mirror the nature of quantum mechanical states .
20 Maybe one of the reasons we all love them is because they subtly reinforce the status quo .
21 It 's not that the TV folk like to be topical , it 's because they rarely have the nous to come up with anything original .
22 Call pick up , as opposed to group pick up , call pick up , should be on there , is star 3 and the extension number , and as you can imagine , you have to know what the extension number is before you actually access the facility .
  Next page