Example sentences of "clearly these [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Now by that he meant that the ends sought should be closely defined and should not change and the means adopted should be effective and they should not change and the consequence is that adversaries then move into er er conflict but the conflict itself is self-limiting in the sense that one side will accept defeat er and , and the consequences of victory and clearly these consequences are not so severe to the state as to jeopardise its existence .
2 Clearly these transects are not comprehensive and omit the distinctive nature of mountainous Barra or the sandstone based Eye Peninsula near Stornoway or the many small uninhabited islands , but these transects highlight the distinction between the low Atlantic coastlands with machair-land and crofting settlement on the west , and the areas of empty mountains and the extensive peat-covered plateaux of the east and most of the interior regions .
3 The inconsistency of the results is partly accounted for by the different methods used for adjusting for other variables , such as disparities in size and monopoly power between control types , but clearly these studies do not bring a definitive answer much closer .
4 Clearly these regulations were meant to confine carried-out timber to that fit only for firewood , but in 1792 complaints were still being made of enormous losses of timber through yard workers , who even finished work early to allow themselves time to saw up useful lengths , which they sold at a shilling each .
5 The following figures are culled from the Judicial Statistics for 1989 , and relate to the Queen 's Bench Division : Clearly these figures are not entirely comparable because they relate to cases at different stages in the procedure .
6 Clearly these figures demonstrate an alarming growth in reported fraud in recent years , however this is probably only the tip of the iceberg .
7 Clearly these sets of circumstances influence the pragmatics of these statements , in ways that we have to unravel by close analysis .
8 Clearly these threats contradict the spirit of partnership in the Children Act .
9 Clearly these libraries might contain information that would be of use to an enemy .
10 Clearly these perspectives are not restricted to teacher responses to innovations proposed by others , but can also be used to explain why particular changes are promoted or envisaged in the first place .
11 Clearly these solutions can easily be generalised by modifying the coefficients of the first terms of ( 10.77 ) .
12 Clearly these ideas relate to Eliot 's plays and to ‘ Burnt Norton ’ where dangers of being ‘ Distracted from distraction by distraction ’ seem connected with the spectre of a metropolis seen as the antithesis of religious values .
13 It is therefore conceptually useful to distinguish between what the mass media tell us to think about — this is signalled by the events they cover — and what specific attitudes or opinions we have to adopt towards those events , though clearly these distinctions may be difficult to uphold in practice .
14 This may be related to the destabilisation of the gastric mucosa engendered by a lifetime of exposure to the environmental conditions in coal mines , although clearly these symptoms could also be related to the asthenia of chronic respiratory disease which is so common in coal miners .
15 Clearly these insects were on to something .
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