Example sentences of "is that [art] " in BNC.
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1 | One of the difficulties is that every person 's situation is different . |
2 | The difficulty is that every handful of weed that 's pulled out is likely to contain its fair share of aquatic creatures too . |
3 | The only real clue to spotting them is that every homestead has electricity and if you see the buildings , you must find the wires going to them before making an approach . |
4 | The result is that every ledge , from those that would take a small tent to those that a modern rock climber would blanch to see , is packed with birds . |
5 | The reason we receive massive newspaper publicity for reports like Empty Quarters and Nobody 's Home is that every property is illustrated . |
6 | She wrote : ‘ The reason China is in the state it is today after four decades of ‘ peacetime construction ’ is that every time a situation arises when people should shout ‘ No ’ to avert a serious policy error , there is nothing but silence . ’ |
7 | The fact is that every ten minutes somebody in Great Britain is seriously injured in an accident . |
8 | The nub of informed consent , they say , is that every human of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what will be done with his body , and they trace the history of informed consent citing the Nuremberg Code ( 1949 ) and the Declaration of Helsinki ( 1964 , amended 1983 ) , which in the aftermath of war atrocities , attempted to ensure the principle of informed consent . |
9 | The underlying idea here is that every corporation , willy-nilly , acquires large amounts of information that is potentially useful in a competitive sense ; but that this information is scattered throughout the firm in its various divisions , units , departments and so on . |
10 | A key point to note is that every stage of processing was able to affect the score of a reading ; thus , for example , a reading that scored more highly during the first ( semantic conflation ) phrase could later be overtaken by another which allowed easier reference resolution . |
11 | The thing about Kennedy is that every time I hear he has done something outrageous I think ‘ Oh God ! ’ , but then I spend a few hours working with him and leave thinking what a good heart he has and how serious he is as a musician . |
12 | The most significant difference is that every unit of the poly-HEMA chain contains a hydroxyl group . |
13 | But the most shocking thing about this new black-humour novel is that every life-or-death horror story is true , says its author , consultant anaesthetist Dr Philip Keep . |
14 | But we do have to face the paradox implicit in our contributing to the discourse , which is that every word we say on the subject of difference just underlines the salience and the importance of a division we are ultimately striving to end . |
15 | The only rule in componential analysis is that every opposition must be classified by plus or minus values on a single dimension ; [ +/; — female ] would be equally valid , and the fact that the analysts chose the other alternative doubtless reflects their ( predictable ) perception that men are the norm of humanity . |
16 | Following Pierce , Eco recognizes the problem of ‘ unlimited semiosis ’ , that is that every ‘ meaning ’ proposed for a representation is itself a representation that has a meaning , etc. , in infinite regression . |
17 | If there is one certainty in a crisis , it is that every Tory MP will put party before country . |
18 | The danger in exclusively privileging the socio-cultural context in the interpretation of human institutions and behaviour is that every social phenomenon becomes so context-dependent that it can not be translated across cultures . |
19 | The trouble with All Fools ' Day is that every newspaper story suddenly looks suspect , but we assure subscribers that IBM Corp really is paying Louis Gerstner all that money it ca n't afford , that the sports shop that sells guns in Kingston really did close early and the UK government is considering a Congestion Charge , but we confess that we have no evidence that the next computer industry consortium will be a catch-all called Computer Industry . |
20 | Asked how he rates himself as a novelist , he replies : ‘ All I can say is that every single book has sold more than the last . |
21 | The idea is that every person has another person ( or sometimes a group or committee ) to whom he or she has to account for the proper discharge of responsibilities . |
22 | No such luck : what makes sex much more complicated but also much more interesting and rewarding is that every single one of us has to learn what it 's all about for ourselves — as unique individuals . |
23 | ‘ The starting point of our domestic law is that every citizen has a right to do what he likes , unless restrained by the common law , including the law of contract , or by statute . |
24 | The most important general piece of advice on examinations is that every question in the paper that the student is expected to and can answer should be answered . |
25 | The most important thing to remember is that every idea , comment or observation must be supported by facts or reasons . |
26 | In its simplest form , the idea is that every particle has every possible path , or history , in space-time . |
27 | In general , what the theory of dialectic materialism states is that every society is structured around its material basis of production . |
28 | My biggest problem , though is that every time I hit the flag , John charges me £450 . |
29 | My big fear , as with so many daughters , is that every year I am becoming more like my mother . |
30 | The proof of this theorem is that every such program can be transformed to x — IF/ALT using the said laws . |