Example sentences of "it [modal v] be [vb pp] that [det] " in BNC.

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1 It may be felt that this analysis has only theoretical value at most .
2 In the absence of any other constant characters it may be concluded that these two species are conspecific .
3 Omitting the voltmeter from our circuit , so that a current can How in the resistive wire , it may be seen that some of the current will be forced through the wire hence the device works as a generator .
4 ( 11.5 ) With this , the line element ( 11.4 ) can be written in the form ( 11.6 ) and the two main equations ( 6.22d , e ) can be written as the single complex equation ( 11.7 ) It may be seen that this is in fact Ernst 's equation , which can be written in the coordinate-invariant form ( 11.8 ) where is the square of the gradient of an arbitrary scalar field which , in this case , is a function of the two ( null ) coordinates only .
5 Concerning the usefulness of the three techniques , it may be noted that all suffer from the necessity for hand-labelling of concordances , which remains a task of considerable size .
6 It may be noted that some modern authorities denote by MA and MP the two main branches of the posterior media , while Cu1 and Cu2 are sometimes known as CuA and CuP respectively .
7 It may be noted that this property is also shared by the combination of terms that are contained in ( 10.16 ) .
8 It may be noted that this area is supported by the ESPRIT 11 programme .
9 It may be noted that these acts were replaced by the Supreme Court of judicature ( Consolidation ) Act 1925 , which has itself now been replaced by the Supreme Court Act 1981 and by certain provisions in the Limitation Act 1980 ( consolidating earlier Limitation Acts ) .
10 It may be noted that these solutions are continuous on the boundaries between the subregions A and B. Also , the terms involving the Legendre functions of the first kind are regular on the focusing hypersurface , while those involving the Legendre functions of the second kind are singular on this surface .
11 As anticipated in the discussion in Section 7.2 , it may be observed that this expression contains the necessary multiples of and that are required to cancel the effects of the unbounded term on the boundary .
12 When evaluating expressions for the Weyl tensor , it is convenient to use the coordinates and defined by ( 10.10 ) ( it may be noticed that these differ from those used by Ferrari and Ibañez ) .
13 It may be conceded that these cases do not put the point beyond argument , although they clearly point towards non-liability in the assignee .
14 As Chapman observed : ‘ Although I do not suggest that the Arsenal go on the defensive even for tactical purposes , I think it may be said that some of their best scoring chances have come when they have been driven back and then have broken away to strike suddenly and swiftly . ’
15 It may be said that these facts are materially different from those in our problem , for in our problem there seems to be no choice as to who is to die : it is simply ( one supposes ) a question of some or all .
16 It may be said that these are superficial impressions derived from a superficial knowledge of small parts of the stratigraphical record .
17 It may be said that this is just one of the cases where it is impossible to be neutral .
18 It may be said that this is not imagining the activity of a postman at all .
19 It may be said that this is tyranny .
20 I am not ignoring that it may be said that this in one sense is proving idem per idem , but none the less I do not think the fact can be ignored .
21 ( 60 ) It may be said that few middle-class couples dare marry without this admirable handbook .
22 First of all , if support teachers always take individual needs as their starting point it may be assumed that any modifications to the curriculum for a particular child relate uniquely to that child 's difficulties .
23 In any situation where someone has died , it may be assumed that more people are likely to be significantly affected by the death of that one individual than may seem apparent .
24 For anthropologists it may be assumed that this is an uncontroversial statement .
25 It may be argued that such distinctions between what machines can do and what only humans can do are of merely temporary interest , since in principle there is nothing that a human can do that a machine might not be devised , some day , to do .
26 It may be argued that many forms of ‘ fringe medicine ’ are not dependent upon any belief in any religion or ‘ god ’ .
27 It may be argued that this was not a new concept of the basic function of monarchy ; perhaps so .
28 It may be argued that this last point has more to do with why the speaker talked about something than with what he talked about .
29 Whilst it may be argued that this is merely an illustration of the duty owed under the OLA 1957 , it may also be said that this exists as a form of liability under the tort of negligence but outside the scope of the 1957 Act .
30 It may be argued that this is an appropriate restriction , since the law catches only those who disseminate or broadcast their propaganda on a wide scale , and not those whose correspondence is entirely private .
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