Example sentences of "[verb] suggest [conj] the [noun] is " in BNC.

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1 9.5 Effect of waiver Each of the Tenant 's covenants shall remain in full force both at law and in equity notwithstanding that the Landlord shall have waived or released temporarily any such covenant or waived or released temporarily or permanently revocably or irrevocably a similar covenant or similar covenants affecting any other part of the Centre or the Adjoining Property This provision is an attempt to circumvent the rather harsh law of waiver , by which a landlord will lose its right to forfeit the lease where a non-continuing breach has occurred if the landlord does some act to suggest that the landlord is nevertheless satisfied to continue the tenancy , eg by accepting rent from the tenant .
2 The experience reported suggests that the method is effective in that at the end of the rotary lithotrite procedures 17 patients had a gall bladder clear of stones , and with subsequent proceduressuch as cholecystoscopy , endoscopic sphincterotomy , and percutaneous cholecystolithotomy all but two patients had stones cleared from the biliary system .
3 In his study of the development of literate practices in medieval England , From Memory to Written Record 1066–1307 ( 1979 ) , Michael Clanchy has suggested that the problem is better formulated in a different way .
4 They further suggest that the form is suitable where the contract period is not more than twelve months and the value of the work is not more than £250,000 at 1984 prices .
5 Does not the divine drama seem to suggest that the Devil is calling the tune ?
6 This natural philosophy ( science ) , and the methodology of Francis Bacon ( 1561–1626 ) and Rene Descartes ( 1596–1650 ) , seems to suggest that the universe is run not by divine decree but by natural laws ; laws that can be discovered by the application of the human mind through the senses ( by observation ) to the physical world .
7 Remember , too , when acting for a seller on a sale by auction to attend the sale itself to answer any questions that a prospective buyer may raise on the title or the special conditions — and be wary of the questioner who seeks to suggest that the title is faulty or that restrictions prohibit development , etc , in the hope of abating the bids offered .
8 But a number of writers have suggested that the sanction is often not effective in practice ( Tivey 1982 ; Foster 1971 : 70 ; Dudley and Richardson 1984 ) .
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