Example sentences of "[adv] that it be [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Hence at balance Although at first sight this may appear to be a single balance condition , in order to be satisfied , the real and imaginary parts of the two sides of the equation must be separately equal so that it is in fact a double balance condition as anticipated .
2 Although Korda was now more of a financier than an active producer , it was his suggestion that led Graham Greene to visit Austria to see if he could find the background in the four-power occupation of Vienna which would inspire him to extend his one-line story : ‘ I had paid my last farewell to Harry less than a week ago , when his coffin was lowered in the frozen February ground , so that it was with incredulity that I saw him pass by , without a sign of recognition , among the host of strangers in the Strand . ’
3 He poured wine into two of the cups and slid one of them across the table so that it was within Sidacai 's reach .
4 BREWIN Dolphin , the London-based private client stockbrokers , confirmed yesterday that it is in talks with Bell Lawrie White , its Edinburgh-based counterpart , which could create one of the largest private client brokers in the UK .
5 It was often said later that it was in Switzerland that Muhammad Reza required a sympathy for aspect of democracy , and that his subsequent attempts to reconcile such notions with the governance of Iran proved to be difficult .
6 But now that it is in power , and dependent on an assembly made up largely of landowners , the government seems to find that option less attractive .
7 Now that it was over Edward seemed to have gone a very long way away from her , as if she was no more than a stranger to whom he was giving a lift .
8 He too had been waiting , he thought , but he had not realized before that it was for Cora-Beth .
9 In Harling in 1938 , Hilbery J. expressed the view that ‘ a charge of rape requires to be sustained by evidence which satisfies the jury first of all that there was carnal knowledge , secondly that it was by force , and thirdly that it was without consent . ’
10 Rev. 31 ( 1938 ) , 205–36 ) argued plausibly that it was about experiments in induced lethargy ( as after all the title of Clearchus ' dialogue about sleep suggests ) .
11 Even that it 's past midnight and I must go home now , although I 'm not a bit tired .
12 There 's an ecumenical consensus nowadays surely that it is by faith and baptism that one is made a Christian or becomes a Christian and we 've also inherited , many of us , another rite , with its origins in the New Testament , valuable in the making of a christian and the three strands in confirmation set out in the report before us would certainly be owned by all of us .
13 And maybe that it is in line with some of the the central targets of their appraisal .
14 In England for the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch , I had a long conversation with James , of which I recall principally that it was about fate .
15 In Harling in 1938 , Hilbery J. expressed the view that ‘ a charge of rape requires to be sustained by evidence which satisfies the jury first of all that there was carnal knowledge , secondly that it was by force , and thirdly that it was without consent . ’
16 A class member of Vanessa 's made a birthday cake iced in blue and white , depicting naturally , a ball , hoop , club and the Medau logo — but so beautifully that it was with difficulty that Marjorie was persuaded to cut into it .
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