Example sentences of "be [adj] [noun] [verb] that the " in BNC.

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1 But aside from this there are ample remedies to ensure that the Director 's powers are not abused , either at long range through the medium of judicial review , or in a more peremptory manner through the power of the trial judge to ensure that the conduct of the trial is fair .
2 There are good reasons to believe that the branching pattern and shape of the dendrites may also be important and may well change as a result of training or other types of experience .
3 Yet , there are persuasive reasons to suppose that the challenge ahead is to hold on to what is here , rather than expect to keep grabbing headlines with prestigious new gains .
4 It would be usual practice to ensure that the payment is costed to the month in which the work is carried out .
5 Add proposed record spending levels on research and development , infrastructure , education , enterprise zones and job training , as well as real estate and profamily incentives , and there may well be good reason to fear that the overall budget deficit may be the constraint that yields if spending cuts ca n't be found to finance all of these initiatives .
6 So far as serious crime was concerned , three conditions had to be satisfied : the crime had to be really serious ; the normal methods of investigation had to have been tried and failed ; and there had to be good reason to believe that the interception would result in a conviction ( Birkett , 1957 ) .
7 Accordingly , it would be good practice to ensure that the customer 's attention is drawn to the salient points of any agreement or written document given to him .
8 In their response to the Houghton Report which preceded the Act in 1972 , BASW argued that the law should not allow parental responsibilities to be removed ( under Section 2 of the 1948 Act ) unless there were good reason to suppose that the local authority 's judgment of the child 's interests was better than the parents ' .
9 The fact that the spillovers are external benefits implies that the local authority responsible for such activity takes no account of it in its decision-making .
10 If you are steadily catching 4lb and 5lb bream it is wishful thinking to hope that the next one will be an 8-pounder .
11 She concludes from her study that there is strong evidence to suggest that the ward ‘ climate ’ is an important factor in the satisfaction of students with their learning environment .
12 There is strong evidence to suggest that the brain does not cope with information in a simple , linear form .
13 Where the purchaser has commissioned an accountants ' report , it is normal practice to request that the vendor warrants the accuracy of the report .
14 The repeat of this metaphor emphasises the fact that the priest is leading people to believe that the church 's only duty is to get people to ‘ join its ranks ’ .
15 There is compelling evidence to suggest that the second amplification stage is mediated by leukotriene B 4 , a lipo-oxygenase product released by the neutrophils themselves .
16 There is good evidence to show that the Mental Health Act is used disproportionately against black people and other disadvantaged groups , and this element of social control that is invested in psychiatric practice is likely to be further strengthened and made more pervasive by the introduction of community supervision orders .
17 Categorising types of writing is not easy , but there is good evidence to suggest that the type of writing attempted has a strong influence on the outcome .
18 The local name of the place , the Gold Pit , implies that a good deal of gold was robbed from the site before the French archaeologists started excavating it in the 1920s , and there is good reason to suppose that the so-called Aegina Treasure , which is now in the British Museum , originated here .
19 If there is no difference , there is good reason to suppose that the Spirit has not been received into the man 's life .
20 All you need is good reason to believe that the caddis house is a Darwinian adaptation .
21 Suffice it to say that there is good reason to believe that the original censuses in Numbers 1 and 26 set out the numbers of each tribe , somewhat in this form :
22 The Ramsey chronicle of c.1170 , for example , claims to have used charters , some written in English , while there is good reason to think that the historian of Ely Abbey did have access to records compiled in Anglo-Saxon in the late tenth century and translated into Latin in the early twelfth .
23 ‘ ( 1 ) Where a coroner is informed that the body of a person ( ‘ the deceased ’ ) is lying within his district and there is reasonable cause to suspect that the deceased — ( a ) has died a violent or an unnatural death ; ( b ) has died a sudden death of which the cause is unknown ; or ( c ) has died in prison or in such a place or in such circumstances as to require an inquest under any other Act , then … the coroner shall as soon as practicable hold an inquest into the death of the deceased either with or , subject to subsection ( 3 ) below , without a jury .
24 ‘ ( 1 ) Where … there is reasonable cause to suspect that the person had died a sudden death of which the cause is unknown , the coroner may , if he is of opinion that a post-mortem examination may prove an inquest to be unnecessary — ( a ) direct any legally qualified medical practitioner … to make a post mortem examination of the body and to report the result of the examination to the coroner in writing .
25 ‘ Nothing in this section shall be construed as authorising the coroner to dispense with an inquest in any case where there is reasonable cause to suspect that the deceased — ( a ) has died a violent or an unnatural death ; or ( b ) has died in prison or in such a place or in such circumstances as to require an inquest under any other Act .
26 There is substantial evidence showing that the chances of surviving to old age are lower among the manual than non-manual groups and that this also applies , though to a lesser extent , to the number of years people live beyond retirement .
27 There is encouraging evidence to suggest that the ‘ young old ’ today are generally both more affluent and in better physical and mental shape than were their counterparts a generation ago at the same age ( ibid : 141 ) .
28 It has consistently regarded that duty as covering not only cases where there is affirmative reason to support that the appellant is innocent , but also cases of quite another description .
29 As the chapter on education will show , there is considerable evidence to indicate that the class system in Western industrial society limits the possibilities of the discovery and utilization of talent .
30 There is abundant authority to show that the action for negligence for harm done through animals is quite distinct from both the cattle trespass rule and the scienter rule .
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