Example sentences of "[noun prp] 's [noun] is that the " in BNC.

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1 Patinkin 's point is that the comparison of positions of static equilibrium , one equilibrium being characterized by a considerably lower price level than the other , may be of very limited practical relevance .
2 One of the main planks of the CCAUK 's argument is that the Annual Percentage rate is not so high as it looks , since though most transactions are contracted for ( say ) 26 weeks , in fact they end up being repaid — with no series problem — in about 30 or 33 weeks , with no penalty .
3 Perhaps the most significant fact about Engels 's book is that the word ‘ origin ’ is in the singular .
4 Hewison 's contention is that the term ‘ postmodernism ’ does little more than signal modernism 's ending : let us than weep for all forms of reflective production , swept away , along with our sense of history , by the marriage of commerce and culture .
5 In the , in the current Middle East erm so this pattern certainly applies to Judaism , not to all religions , he 's not saying that all religions have to undergo persecution in order to as it were flourish , but some religions do and perhaps the characteristic Judaism or at least this kind of monotheism is these kind of religions tend to be intolerant and single-mindedly , tend to say that we know the truth , everybody else is wrong and consequently they tend to persecute others and get persecuted and this leads to these periods of suppression , but there 's a tendency for this kind of return of repress just as Mike was saying , his very brilliant analogy he suggested the French Revolution when the students put the barricade up in the same place or so the erm Freud 's idea is that the things that happened in that first traumatic period back in Ancient Egypt and for example erm he said this is why the modern erm Jews insist on circumcision because the Ancient Egyptians did and this is , this is correct .
6 Freud 's reply is that the research method of psychoanalysis has revealed that religion has not helped men to be happy , nor moral , nor cultured and intelligent .
7 Ashby 's idea is that the government should introduce a system of employment vouchers , valued at around £3–4,000 , for unemployed people unable to find employment after at least two years on ET and a temporary work scheme .
8 North 's belief is that the Joint Aviation Authorities will not adopt CAA Special Conditions requirements and that ‘ if they do n't enhance safety they should be dropped ’ .
9 Finniston 's thesis is that the creation of wealth should come before the creation of employment ,
10 The CDP 's fear is that the local authorities will be so hard pressed , because of government policy , that they will be unable or unwilling to help in the future .
11 Chafe 's view is that the event is held in some abstract form which allows the recreation of sub-chunks and propositions on the basis of the needs of the story situation at that time .
12 For the whole basis of Sartre 's argument is that the dialectic of history is not a metaphysical law , ‘ some powerful unitary force revealing itself behind History like the will of God ’ , but the continuously produced effect of individual conflicts ; each action is in its turn subsumed as a part of the whole in an ever broader , developing totalization ( I , 37 ) .
13 But Winch 's argument is that the elder knows he has done wrong in killing the gangster .
14 Western Europe 's hope and Moscow 's fear is that the process also entitles the West to stipulate what ‘ reduction of tensions ’ comprises and how it is to be judged .
15 The theory behind Sir Bryan 's thinking is that the more efficient tied agents — such as the building societies — will offer the products to consumers at lower prices than smaller and less efficient tied agents .
16 The immediate reason for not using Labov 's concept is that the vernacular must be an idealization — on a par with other idealizations such as dialect or speech community — and so as an idealization it must be inaccessible in practice ( recall that you do not observe the language : you observe people talking ) .
17 So perhaps Mill 's claim is that the pleasurableness of life is all that matters but that this can not always be so well promoted by increasing the quantity of low level pleasure as by obtaining lesser amounts of high quality pleasure .
18 Leibniz 's view is that the sources of individuation lie within the entities themselves ; in other words , entities are regarded as basic , and places are said to be explicable in terms of relations between entities — " entities " meaning here " individual substances " or " monads " .
19 What emerges from Frank and Keller 's work is that the nature of the crystals is different in natural and synthetic polymers .
20 Saussure 's answer is that the function of the sign depends exclusively on its relationship with , or more exactly its difference from , other signs .
21 The alternative to Joos 's view is that the two editions of the infinitive are variants .
22 In this respect an important lesson from Allende 's experiment is that the decision to abolish private property inevitably results in the erosion of economic and political freedom also .
23 This tale is set in Antwerp , and the major difference between it and the Miller 's Tale is that the woman concerned is not a wife but a prostitute , who lives in Coperstraten ( apparently Merchant Street , although it has been suggested it should really be Coeperstraten , Cow Gate Street ) .
24 Kuhn 's answer is that the thinking of a scientific community takes place within a ‘ paradigm ’ which governs what scientists are to make of recalcitrant experience .
25 My Lords , the influence behind the Noble Lord 's amendment is that the British Transport Police will not have the full jurisdiction on Rail Track property .
26 Also acting against Britain 's interests is that the previous director general before Quistgaard hailed from these isles .
27 Brasel and Quigley 's conclusion is that the early language environment offered by the use of signing improves the child 's prospects in the learning of English .
28 Cairns-Smith 's guess is that the original replicators were crystals of inorganic materials , such as those found in clays and muds .
29 The thrust of The Enquirer 's story is that the final straw for Diana came when she was given a transcript of the alleged taped conversation between Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles .
30 The Prague School 's and Jakobson 's assumption is that the structures they describe are all objectively present in literature , and can be perceived by anyone who reads with sufficient skill and attention .
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