Example sentences of "[pers pn] assume that [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I assumed that open string resonance must be enhanced by this .
2 All my furlough tickets are LNER , but I assume that other companies issued them .
3 I assume that most fishkeepers aim to have their fish live as long and grow as large as possible , so the first consideration is a large tank .
4 Thank you very much Mr chairman , I would like to endorse what Mr has said , erm , I assume that this carer 's allowance is aimed primarily er , at er , women with dependant children .
5 As shown in the table , the 3849+10 kb mutation is associated with milder disease and these patients live longer ( we assumed that advanced age indicated a lower mortality rate ) and were in better nutritional condition .
6 Are we to assume that old people 's needs , joys and sorrows are the same as our own ?
7 In the final section of Chapter 6 , we construct a simple model of inflation in which we assume that all prices are cost-plus prices .
8 The total bequest is divided among the heirs to give the inheritance of the next generation ( we assume that all wealth passes linearly one generation at a time ) .
9 To do this , we assume that all firms determine their prices by adding a profit margin to the cost of a unit of output .
10 We assume that all firms have identical cost conditions and , given the symmetry in the utility function , all firms in the industry have the same level of output .
11 Unless we assume that all individuals are the same then presumably we may all have different values and different perceptions of how to satisfy these values .
12 In ( 8.12 ) we assume that simple interest and not compound interest is used ( otherwise we would need to use ( 1 + r ) T ) and that carry costs in the cash market are proportional to price .
13 We assume that competent doctors emerge at the end of an obstacle course of traditional examinations based on facts .
14 For simplicity , we assume that existing plant has a maximum capacity of Q units of output and the SMC is constant at the level c up to full capacity and then becomes vertical .
15 In all cases except FEDV this criterion is satisfied since all other variables are dated t - 1 or earlier , and we assume that such variables are in agents ' information sets .
16 Suppose we assume that each regulation is enforced up to the point at which the marginal cost and marginal benefit of saving life are equal for that activity .
17 Instead we assume that each store location in main store can hold either an instruction or a piece of data ; this does not , of course , preclude the possibility of distinguishing these two cases at any particular time , either by segregating instruction areas from data areas , or by marking store locations in some way .
18 If we assume that aggregate output is a function of the mean inheritance and mean labour capacity , and that the latter has converged to its equilibrium value ( which we can then normalize at unity , ) , then output per man at time u may be written as .
19 However in this instance there is no a priori reason for binding to one rather than the other , so we assume that both sites are equally occupied .
20 For simplicity , we assume that both relationships are linear and so can be drawn as straight lines as in Fig. 3 .
21 First , we assume that visionary leadership is a dynamic , interactive phenomenon , as opposed to a unidirectional process .
22 Third , we assume that visionary style can take on a variety of different forms .
23 If we assume that this ratio is stable and repeat our earlier point that banks will normally be looking to expand their lending as a source of profit , then it follows fairly obviously that a change in the availability of base money to banks must be matched by a change in the size of the total balance sheet and that this latter change must be some multiple of the change in the size of the base .
24 We assume that this rate applied in 1981 ; thus there were 365000 such lone mothers .
25 If we assume that some investors within each group were " not interested " in an activity made more profitable by the construction of a canal but only in dividends or , after 1790 , in speculative profit , and that this was almost wholly true of women investors , substantially so of the clergy and of the majority of those from the professions , then it is clear that overall at least a quarter of investment in canals was drawn from a net cast unprecedentedly widely .
26 If we assume that these vehicles have an operational life of five years , and that 10 per cent is an agreed discount rate , then this scheme should produce benefits in net present value terms of approximately £2.8 million .
27 Even if we assume that seasonal usage is constant but prices increase by 10 per cent p.a. , we produce a difference :
28 The problems were , was that the schools , since they were doing this , they assumed that all schools did this , therefore they did n't need to talk about it , they did n't need to tell them about it .
29 Sometimes they assume that such relations can be altered by intervening at this purely psychological level .
30 They assume that people know where their own best interests lie ; they assume that people will automatically participate in politics if their interests are threatened ; and they assume that all interests possess the " potential " to organise and be influential in politics .
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