Example sentences of "[verb] [conj] these [noun pl] [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The Speeches suggest that these phrases refer to Hansard reports but , particularly in respect of contextual material , this may not be so .
2 We tentatively suggest that these observations support our working hypothesis , although there is no monotonic inverse relationship between incidence of plurals and incidence of use of both , as one might suspect .
3 I suggest that these meanings arise from everyday discourse , which habitually makes use of oppositions such as masculinity/femininity , science/arts — oppositions which make sense only in relation to each other .
4 The new results suggest that these galaxies undergo intermittent outbursts as a companion passes particularly close to them .
5 It used to be thought that this was temporary diabetes resulting from the stress of infarction , but present data suggest that these patients have undiagnosed diabetes before infarction ( Husband et al , 1983 ; Oswald et al , 1984 ) .
6 The textures and general characters of the gneisses suggest that these rocks have been metamorphosed to high grades such that they are migmatised ( melted ) in places .
7 Some accounts also suggest that these waves swept over the low-lying parts of St Pierre , near the waterfront , causing some damage and casualties .
8 In the context , this ‘ very lax attitude ’ seems to be measured against circumstances ( such as late Old English or the present day ) in which there is a uniform standard of spelling : thus , what this really means is that in Early ME there was no uniform standard , and indeed Scragg adds that these scribes had ‘ no conception of a spelling standard ’ .
9 Defant and Drummond proposed that these suites form where young ( 25Myr ) , hot oceanic lithosphere is subducted and melts , thus locally simulating the conditions that led to widespread crustal growth in the Archaean .
10 It must be stressed that these examples refer in some cases to complete pieces of music , in others to themes which form only part of a longer movement .
11 The research into investigation of possible child abuse cases demonstrated that these ideas did tend to influence the kinds of questions that were asked , and the way in which ‘ evidence ’ was interpreted .
12 In this work he needed to know that these numbers factorised uniquely into primes ( 3.7.13 ) just as do the ordinary integers .
13 ‘ One must recognise that these polls take place , but also carefully remember that a decision about any vacancy that takes place is taken by my colleagues in the House of Commons , and not the general public . ’
14 Although it is claimed that these cases indicate an impairment in executing symbolic gestures it may in fact be the case that this aspect of their difficulty is secondary to a deficit in dealing with sequences of movements in general , the apparent linguistic defect deriving from this ( Kimura , Battison and Lubert , 1976 ) .
15 It can scarcely be claimed that these questions have yet been answered in such a manner as to transform Marx 's very general model into a systematic and well-supported theory of historical development .
16 He subsequently described this as merely a " rhetorical technique , " and underlined that these remarks did not represent Yelsin 's views or his own .
17 People realise that these things come along and you have to look at them ’ — CRAIG INNES ( former All Black centre ) on his signing for Leeds RLFC .
18 The first merely points out the difficulties with scepticism ; the internalist would accept this and say that these difficulties have to be faced and not ignored .
19 You say that these books stand in their own right , and are important perhaps in the historical context of the development of the novel , but do they constitute what I 'd call a good read ?
20 They say that these trades taught there are no longer needed .
21 The Revenue has subsequently responded that these costs did not fulfil the requirements of s 84(1) of ICTA 1988 , arguing that these fees were not an expense of the trade but ones which put the client in a position to carry out his trade , being akin in their opinion to home to business mileage .
22 Under assault by Muslim Arabs , they found that these pinnacles provided their only protection and they clung on there , up amid the remains of the ancient cedar forests .
23 Yet he accepts that these countries need small , defensively equipped armies that could make a potential attacker think twice .
24 In this regard the Council accepts that these responsibilities include the provision of :
25 The second major problem is that people who do not consider that these needs have been met continually manipulate others to meet them .
26 He concludes that these systems show a number of deficiencies in dealing with UDC numbers unless written with UDC in mind .
27 ‘ People in the diocese will be devastated that these allegations have been made .
28 He doubted if these boys had been playing soccer — Hurstdown 's sporting young gentlemen would surely scorn such a plebeian game — and , sure enough , the boy bringing up the rear , older and taller than the rest and evidently in charge , was clutching a rugby ball to his chest .
29 She glared at Hank as he stood by the front door ready to open it for the paper 's representatives , and tried not to scream while these gentlemen put on their boots again .
30 It is not only that other scientists can not know whether such effects occurred in the experimenter 's interaction with his subjects ; the investigator himself may not know whether these effects have occurred .
  Next page