Example sentences of "it [be] [art] [noun sg] of " in BNC.

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1 Has it been a result of clear theological arguments ?
2 Had it been a figment of imagination , brought about with the increasing gloom , and the aura of the surrounding dereliction ?
3 ( Had it been an excess of antiquarks , however , we would simply have named antiquarks quarks , and quarks antiquarks . )
4 But of course , had Alexander 's argument and Lewis 's interpretation of it been irrefutable , had it been the kind of thing which compelled religious certainty , then all the philosophers in Oxford would have fallen to their knees when they had finished reading it .
5 Just the sort of behaviour , in fact , that , had it been the work of the lads from the local council estate , would have resulted in a platoon of plods descending at great speed , batons ready in the best of LAPD fashion .
6 Nor has it been the result of government action and state control .
7 Behind it are a couple of clapboard cabins , their windows gone and their planks left to loosen in a wind that never quite dies .
8 The main and more or less stable plate that dominates the area is known , hardly surprisingly , as the Pacific Plate ; surrounding it are a number of equally large , or smaller plates such as the Australian , the Nazca , the North American and the Cocos Plate .
9 However , the reaction is extremely complex and current ideas about it are the subject of hot debate .
10 1 The established constitution and the rules that are part of it are an aspect of the constraining context that operates on everyday politics .
11 Or would it be a sign of still greater maturity for their staff to go on contributing to a national system , a system in which the collaboration of the entire academic community could raise standards higher and judge quality more surely ?
12 Exercise , gently at first , and let it be a part of your programme of change .
13 ( 5 ) It is not part of the bankruptcy process , nor should it be a part of the bankruptcy scheme , to ensure that bankrupts are prosecuted and the court should shrink from a construction of the statute that lends support to any such result .
14 Would it be a time of wonder , or would it be the old conflicts continued ?
15 It was not a book that he had packed when leaving London : he had bought it a day or two earlier in Inverness , and to Boswell , years later , he gave , not unmemorably , his reasons for buying it at all : ‘ Why , Sir , if you are to have but one book with you upon a journey , let it be a book of science .
16 Need it be a matter of wonder , when we see her capable of such restraint in general , that she should retire within herself and exercise that control we find her continually exerting over all her thoughts and actions the more energetically at a time when she is taught that a stray thought of desire would be impurity and its fruition pollution .
17 Nor can it be a matter of the effects he intends to cause in hearers , for one may say something with a definite meaning , with all sorts of different such intentions , and , in any case , the causal theory as advanced by Stevenson is concerned with the actual causal potency of language , not with what is intended .
18 Two questions you will constantly be asked are : What can be done with the old wreck ? and What will it cost and wo n't it be a waste of taxpayers ' money ?
19 How would it be a waste of time ?
20 If a Member on one side of the House sought to simulate anger by crossing the floor , punching an opponent on the nose and destroying his paper , would it be a breach of privilege for a court of law to proceed against him ?
21 After Nunney Castle goes to the seaside will it be the turn of double-chimneyed Clan Castle pictured at Loughborough by JOHN EAST .
22 Would it be the mind of the assembly we hear Mr now and we deal with this addendum ?
23 Should it be the supply of money , and if so which measure ?
24 Would it be the policy of the Labour party to legalise those drugs ?
25 Would not it be the height of folly to give away our own independent nuclear deterrent while any potential aggressor has the ability to strike at us ?
26 Nor , more abstractedly , could it be the result of a perspective on the informational content of the brain ; for , in either case , the perspective would have to be the occurrence of some further brain or informational state and to both of these the scientist has complete access , and the problem reoccurs .
27 Or should it be the rate of interest , and if so at what level ?
28 At the same time the wife 's role was to serve , and this modest withdrawal was as it were a part of the service .
29 As E. R. Curtius has pointed out , the pious attitude of the Romans to their past and their tendency to regard it as if it were a part of the present signified a kind of timelessness that excluded a genuinely historical view of the world and was very different from our sense of temporal perspective .
30 Instead they are to put on , as if it were a suit of new clothes , the new humanity that Is brought to them in Christ and is constantly renewed by a deepening knowledge of Christ , into the Creator 's original image in man , a likeness to God himself : hence the ‘ compassion , kindness , lowliness , meekness , patience , forbearance ’ , love , peace and gratitude of which he goes onto speak ( Col. 3:1,5–16 ) .
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