Example sentences of "[noun sg] be that [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 The result is that riders who want to avoid heatstroke have to wear as little as possible under their jackets and most of us men have n't got used to innocently looking round to see someone undoing her jacket to reveal nothing but a clingy bra underneath !
2 And what we do from research is that children who smoke are more likely to smoke the brands that are heavily advertised
3 The general rule is that problems which can not be solved at lower levels are referred upward through the organisation structure until the problem reaches an official with enough authority and power to solve the problem .
4 ‘ My fear is that people who are not suspected of committing an immigration offence may find themselves on this machine , which could have startling ramifications for them , ’ he said this week .
5 The deplorable side of this training programme was that candidates who were deemed ‘ unreliable ’ were betrayed to the French Sûreté on their return to Vietnam .
6 The most important outcome of the increased use of monitoring equipment is that people who suffer from respiratory diseases can be alerted to the possibility of a problem arising within the following 24 hours .
7 He says that every prisoner leaving jail should at least have enough clothing to make a fresh start , the danger is that prisoners who do n't have enough funds can return to crime .
8 The outcome is that men who have few resources other than physical ones are more likely to commit legally defined rape , whilst those men who possess a whole range of resources from economic patronage to cultural charm are likely to be viewed by the law as ‘ real men ’ practising their primeval arts-and that is something the majesty of the law should leave alone !
9 The sad truth is that doctors who spend careers in research may forgo huge incomes from private practice .
10 The truth is that Ministers who mouth those grandiloquent guarantees know little of what is happening on the ground .
11 The point is that birds themselves are warm-blooded , like mammals , and if birds and dinosaurs are as closely related as now seems likely , then it obviously increases the likelihood that the dinosaurs themselves may have been warm-blooded .
12 One is that they are more willing to explore new skills ; the other is that Imo herself was young , and macaques interact most with other individuals in their troop of a similar age to themselves .
13 The thrust of this argument is that tribunals which resolve disputes have matured beyond the framework envisaged by the Franks Report .
14 Medical advice is that men who drink more than 21 units a week and women who drink more than 14 units could damage their health .
15 The one stumbling block is that people who come to the bank for loans have to pay half the consultant 's fee — which could come to several hundred pounds .
16 The dominance of the behavioural approach has led to the equating of need with willingness to pay or expressed demand … [ but ] a by-product of behaviour-based transport planning is that individuals who do not show ‘ demand ’ for movements are assumed not to ‘ need ’ to move
17 An obvious benefit of having the video machine under your control is that sections you can break a programme up into sections and guide your learners through it one section at a time .
18 Well my feeling is that students who graduate from here ultimately get jobs .
19 The message is that drivers who do n't break their journey , are in serious danger of not completing it at all .
20 The main disadvantage of the network approach is that areas which are not covered are thereby excluded completely .
21 The only difference you will notice in normal LIFESPAN operation is that transactions which involve reading offlined modules will take longer than usual , as the modules must first be brought back online .
22 you do n't think the other thing is that people who erm you know there there is everybody 's got wedding fairs in their own area , first of all , they 're going to go to those anyway and buy from their own local person .
23 Well the suggestion is that people who are n't er maintaining a traditional family unit are actually being , like being penalised by public policy , is is is that a general opinion ?
24 The trouble was that neither of them was entirely certain he was right , and the funny thing was that people who were n't entirety certain they were right always argued much louder than other people , as if the main person they were trying to convince was themselves .
25 The inference which might be drawn from this analysis was that Eliot himself had conceived a homosexual passion for just such a young man and , when the article was reprinted four years after Eliot 's death , it was suggested to be Jean Verdenal , the Frenchman whom Eliot had met in Paris when he was a student there and to whom , after his death in the First World War , he dedicated Prufrock and Other Observations .
26 The most striking finding is that individuals which most frequently gave aid are those which most frequently receive it .
27 ‘ With an auction , you 've got to be certain that at least two buyers are there who can commit themselves , and the difficulty is that buyers who can proceed are few and far between , ’ said David Phillip , a director of Yorkshire estate agents Dacre Son and Hartley .
28 Since managers may be assessed on short term profitability , heavy investment in R & D may adversely affect their rating ; a second worry is that firms which invest heavily in R & D may be ‘ undervalued ’ by financial institutions .
29 Another forecast is that companies which have committed themselves to supplying multiple retailers — which is still being publicly advanced as the correct structural direction for the beef industry to take — could find themselves at a permanent disadvantage .
30 A negative side of the pro-baby culture is that women who do not breed are ‘ mules ’ .
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