Example sentences of "are [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

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31 ’ There are times you do n't agree in football .
32 There are artists whose inspiration and field of action is the landscape itself .
33 There are artists who paint in every detail and there are other artists ( like Turner ) who convey a mood witch undefined washes of colour .
34 That is rarely , if ever , the case , but there are phenomena which approach it , and which need some thought .
35 If they are voluminous , they are not notes — if they are notes they are not voluminous .
36 Often there are projects whose cash flows do not follow the conventional pattern of an initial net outflow followed by a series of net cash inflows .
37 There are projects we 're working on in Santa Barbara that — ’
38 Second , are States which ratify the Convention closer to its coming into force bound by the terms of the Convention , or the terms as altered by subsequent actions of non-parties .
39 Indian journalists are busily burrowing into the business affairs of the prime minister 's family , and there are signs they might find something embarrassing .
40 A dozen spills later I came across the Stigma note : Indicia are signs which create a certain presumption ( proof ) .
41 If there are contracts which are essential to the conduct of the business , the purchaser should make obtaining consent to assign or novate these a condition precedent .
42 Her hands are claws she keeps concealed within her rags and tatters .
43 There are proposals which relate to earmarking all , or a proportion of revenue from specific consumption goods ( Denton 1982 ) .
44 ‘ Sub-cultures ’ are cultures which exist in a context dominated by the decisions , values and attitudes of others .
45 Choropleth maps are maps which show the distribution of the magnitude of a variable such as population density for each of a set of areal units such as counties or enumeration districts .
46 It is all too easy to find that the only properly planned meetings are the ones at which exchange of contracts and completion take place and those are meetings which are usually orchestrated by the solicitors acting for the buyer and the seller .
47 And then there are cases which do not seem to correspond with any of the given meanings .
48 In practical terms this concern is relevant only where supervising and senior staff in the agency may learn about a pollution ; by definition these are cases which the agency regards as important , in particular , those which may have implications for the agency 's public reputation .
49 What explanatory surveys require are cases which possess characteristics relevant to the problem of the research .
50 Coercive inducements are inducements which are so powerful , and so difficult to refuse , that they come to act as a kind of coercion .
51 They are idealizations which serve to ‘ cover and to evade the actual and bitter contradictions of the time ’ ( Williams , 1973 , p. 45 ) .
52 Within organisations and even within departments there are values which take priority and create the culture .
53 Not just truth-telling , but sincerity ; not just intelligibility , but empathy ; these are values which ought to be taken on board .
54 If the application is made on the grounds that debts have been paid or secured and it is known that there are creditors who have not proved their debts , the court may direct that notice be given to them of the application and order the trustee ( or official receiver ) to advertise the application and , in the meantime , adjourn the application for not less than thirty-five days ( r 6.209 ) .
55 When enterprises plan their production on the criterion of profitability they are only honouring their obligation to their shareholders — — to earn them a reasonable return on their money — and if those shareholders are institutions which are in turn merely trustees of the people 's savings … well , evidently notions of class struggle and exploitation must be out of date .
56 The results of such changes are institutions which concentrate very largely on advanced vocational and general courses .
57 And while it 's very reassuring that schools have n't changed too much — I do n't think we want everything to change overnight — I think you could say that schools are open to the same criticism as of British industry at the moment , that they are institutions which perhaps are changing too slowly for the demands of the modern world .
58 They are dervishes who call upon the name of God .
59 Here they are conflicts which are collective in character , not just within the individual .
60 These are patterns which resemble vernacular states of language in which change and variation are inherent , and which do not resemble standard language states , which are uniform .
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