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

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1 If the body exercising the power has been established especially for that purpose , the courts are likely to conclude that Parliament intended the body to act personally .
2 Looking at the facts as a whole , the General Commissioners were entitled to conclude that the platform fell within the definition of plant .
3 Thus Protagon was able to conclude that the performance of the racket related to adjustment of the string tension is 11 times more than its performance related to the change in the stiffness of the frame .
4 The trial judge was correct to conclude that he was not obliged , by PACE , S.78 , to exclude the confession .
5 Where the court is able to conclude that the wife 's ‘ implied consent to marital intercourse ’ has been formally revoked , non-consensual intercourse by the husband amounts to rape .
6 None the less , Springhall is unwilling to conclude that young people were repressed by adults .
7 I have no doubt that the wishes of a 16- or 17-year-old child or indeed of a younger child who is ‘ Gillick competent ’ are of the greatest importance both legally and clinically , but I do doubt whether Thorpe J. was right to conclude that W. was of sufficient understanding to make an informed decision .
8 It would of course be wrong to conclude that this particular form of co-operative , the community co-operative , is bound to fail .
9 People are likely to conclude that you are genuine if you do some or all of the following things :
10 By 1987 Wilmink was able to conclude that the Act ‘ has had a stimulating effect on the development of plans for the construction of bicycle tracks ’ and that ‘ attention to bicycle facilities in all stages of planning , design and maintenance of the infrastructure has become common practice . ’
11 Lord Justice Neill said a substantial award was justified and the High Court jury was entitled to conclude that the publication of the article and its aftermath were a ‘ terrible ordeal ’ for Miss Rantzen .
12 If we add to these the possibility that juries sometimes acquit notwithstanding convincing evidence of guilt , we have to accept that an acquittal does not indicate that the police were wrong to conclude that the accused was guilty .
13 No doubt Thomas Hardy 's biographer is right to conclude that the novelist 's sombre outlook on life was conditioned by his parents ’ practice of relating ‘ stories of suicides and executions . ’
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