Example sentences of "conclude that the " in BNC.
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1 | The Commission concludes that the community charge will become harder to collect and that every effort should be made to introduce the new tax in April 1993 . |
2 | The Commission concludes that the Government should consider options to enhance the local tax base and should make efforts to increase the understanding and acceptability of SSAs . |
3 | Levitt concludes that the Italian 's success demonstrates his belief that you should not provide consumers with what they say they want , because their behaviour demonstrates that they will take other features if the product is priced and promoted correctly . |
4 | From his study of Lawrence at that time , Paul Delany concludes that the writer had ‘ strong homosexual impulses which he felt morally bound to repress ’ ( Nightmare , 50 ) . |
5 | Peter McIntosh , the co-author of this report and a pioneer in the historical study of sport in modern Britain , concludes that the state via the Sports Council should ‘ base both research and promotion on enjoyment rather than social function ’ . |
6 | Sir Anthony concludes that the DTI did not adopt this tactic ‘ as a matter of urgency ’ because of the ‘ inadequate grasp within the Licensing Unit of the detail of their powers under the Act which they had the task of administering . ’ |
7 | When we say that what we see is a mile away , we must mean that were we to move forward a mile , we would be ‘ affected with such and such ideas of touch ’ ; and so Berkeley concludes that the things we see are not the same as those we touch . |
8 | He concludes that the effectiveness of a given system should be based on its ability to fit in with the external systems making up its environment on the one hand , and , on the other hand , on its competence in allowing its own sub-systems to fit in with each other . |
9 | The panel 's report , which has now been published , concludes that the process operations are not unsafe . |
10 | He concludes that the event demonstrates only the ‘ growing pains of a young republic ’ which ‘ after 5000 years of conquerors … looks forward to a prosperous and peaceful future . ’ |
11 | Welsh concludes that the neutral-free gas tunnel to Beta Canis Majoris is at least 1000 light years long , with the Sun located near one end . |
12 | An extensive survey of obsolescence studies by Line and Sandison , however , concludes that the librarian can make little practical use of the concept of obsolescence . |
13 | Moore ( 1988 ) discusses the advisory paper and concludes that the UKCC clearly acknowledge the role of the profession , together with the Statutory Bodies , in defining acceptable ethical standards , but it remains the responsibility of the individual nurse to set standards through practice . |
14 | A risk assessment by the NRPB concludes that the risk to individuals from radiation from the trenches will be greatest 450 years after their closure . |
15 | He also concludes that the dominant interaction within each hypercolumn is inhibitory . |
16 | It concludes that the APB ‘ may well be asking for the impossible ’ . |
17 | In the standard account of the party 's growth into a modern political organisation over the period 1910–24 , McKibbin ( 1974 ) concludes that the war was not of first importance to its ultimate rise to power : |
18 | It concludes that the causes of the increase in exclusions are difficult to define . |
19 | Gallie concludes that the relatively greater emphasis upon authoritarian and paternalistic practices within the French context is not solely a reflection of managerial attitudes engendered by the structural characteristics of industry , as typified by a long predominance of small , family firms in which the employer regarded himself as having a right to exclusive control . |
20 | Caledor Dragontamer concludes that the only way to stop Chaos is to drain the winds of magic from the world . |
21 | Rosenhan concludes that the diagnosis of mental illness has less to do with the symptoms that are exhibited by patients , and more to do with the way that behaviour is interpreted by doctors who ‘ know ’ that someone is mentally ill . |
22 | Walmsley looks at several possible explanations and concludes that the change is largely due to the Act itself , firstly in the simple sense that the passing of the 1967 Act brought to an end a trial period of uncertainty for the police by making quite clear that , although in the future homosexual acts in private between consenting adults were to be legal , such acts in ‘ public ’ as defined by the Act were not . |
23 | And when the whole gamut of richly charged contexts is reviewed , Turner concludes that the ‘ milk tree ’ represents in the symbolic life of the Ndembu their equivalent to Goethe 's conception of ‘ eternal womanhood ’ , an image which is peculiarly apt as their society is founded on the matrilineal kinship principle . |
24 | In its latest edition , Microprocessor Report has compared the various superscalar architectures now on offer and concludes that the ‘ relatively conservative , partitioned approach to superscalar implementation has a clock rate advantage over the more aggressive duplicated-resource approach : the highest clock-rate designs are the 21064 ( DEC 's Alpha ) , 7100 ( Hewlett-Packard Co new PA-RISC iteration ) , and HyperSparc ( assuming Cypress/Ross achieves its 80MHz goal ) . |
25 | However , he also concludes that the precise relationship between these influences upon the decision to retire from work early probably varies between different sectors of the economy . |
26 | Craig ( 1987 ) concludes that the trends are now back to the pre-industrialization pattern of population and that the ‘ 1911 type ’ may eventually turn out to have been exceptional . |
27 | He concludes that the ‘ … ultimate issue was that of Celtic ecclesiastical autonomy against integration within the Roman ecclesiastical system ’ . |
28 | Lauterpacht concludes that the subsequent Resolution of the Assembly shows that the Assembly accepted the Court 's opinion , although a diversity of views persisted on the nature of the effect of the election . |
29 | Although it has been traditionally assumed that Labour Governments are more susceptible to defeat in the Lords than Conservative administrations , Brazier concludes that the Lords have been surprisingly even-handed in dealing out legislative defeats . |
30 | Snodgrass ( 1963 ) agrees with the earlier views of Hanstrom ( 1928 ) and concludes that the protocerebrum , deutocerebrum and antennae are derivatives of an anterior , non-segmented blastocephalon , followed by four of the segments ( premandibular to labial ) recognized above . |