Example sentences of "[det] be the " in BNC.

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1 Over and above that are the various assurance schemes designed to offer as near as possible a guarantee of quality , safety , wholesomeness and implied animal welfare in the whole process in much the same way as the lion 's stamp once guaranteed eggs in the pre-Edwina Currie days .
2 I know it sounds silly , but I say , the silly things like that are the ones that sometimes are the
3 You 're setting up a place for people to live and conduct their business , and the people most able to do that are the gipsies themselves .
4 And we 've now reached a situation in which there 's something over twenty percent of our streets is multiple occupation , erm and this is noise and other activities in relation to that are the things that cause the sort of low level of concern , and this was just the peak on top of that of major aggravation .
5 To every method must be added preliminary and post cleaning actions which at the very least are the assembly of cleaning materials and their cleaning and return afterwards .
6 Had that been the giant eel ?
7 The woman had not looked like a prostitute , besides which had that been the case Fedorov 's driver should have been taking a walk along the quay , or just sitting gazing tactfully ahead .
8 Too late now to withdraw this confession into privacy , even had that been the abbot 's inclination , for it had been spoken out before all the brothers , and as members of a body they had the right to share in the cure of all that here was curable .
9 Had that been the case with the National Bus Company , one would not have quarrelled with it .
10 Why 's that been the case ?
11 But deeper than all this are the values of our society .
12 Perhaps a common expression of this are the preparations people undertake when they are about to go on a trip .
13 There are times when understated architectural solutions like this are the right ones .
14 Added to this are the high repetition and drop-out rates .
15 Good examples of this are the genes that give rise to the histones ( proteins that make up the chromosomal superstructure ) , the ribosomal RNA , the immunoglobulins and many others .
16 Typical examples of this are the inability to have biosensors that can operate effectively for any length of time in blood and the need for anticoagulants during extracorporeal procedures such as dialysis and heart-lung bypass operations .
17 An example of this are the disc and composite brooches of Kent ( Avent 1975 ) .
18 Inside this are the home ranges of several females .
19 Below this are the emperor and his fourth wife , Elizabeth of Pomerania .
20 Examples of this are the ICL 1900 and 2900 ranges of computer .
21 In English , the most obvious examples of this are the cliched openings of jokes like ‘ Have you heard the one about the … ? ’ or personal anecdotes : ‘ Listen !
22 Obvious indicators of this are the numbers with occupational pensions : in 1973 only 60 per cent of men over 55 in full-time employment belonged to a pension scheme run by their current employer .
23 Examples of this are the Strobe 100 and the Hewlett Packard Sweetlips plotters .
24 Exceptions to this are the Linguistic String Project ( Sager , 1981 ) which had a lexical coverage of about 10,000 words ( although many of these are specialist medical terms ) ; the CLAWS system ( Leech et al , 1983 ) ( Atwell , 1983 ) ( Atwell et al 1984 ) used to tag the LOB corpus had a lexicon of approximately 7,200 words plus a 670 SUFFIXLIST which added word-tags to most other words ; IBM 's CRITIQUE ( formerly EPISTLE ) system ( Heidorn et al , 1982 ) with a lexicon of approximately 100,000 words and the Alvey Natural Language Tools ( ANLT ) ( Carroll & Grover , 1989 ) , an early version of which contained a lexicon of nearly 7,000 morphemes ( probably about 20,000 words ) .
25 Examples of this are the CLAWS system ( Garside , 1987 ) for tagging the LOB corpus and the PARTS tagger ( Church , 1988 ) which is being used for tagging the ACL/DCI corpus .
26 Examples of this are the phonetic information and the etymological descriptions of words .
27 Among the reasons for this are the continued creation of neologisms , the introduction of foreign words and the vast array of proper nouns that exist .
28 The only people who really benefit from this are the larger companies that enjoy the benefits of both an informal workforce and government grants , loans and subsidies .
29 One might alternatively suggest that a single standard driving schema exists and deviations from this are the appropriate measure rather than deviations from junction specific expectations .
30 The costs of this are the interest that must be paid on it and the opportunity cost of being unable to undertake some other activity because of lack of funds .
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