Example sentences of "[adj] [that] [pron] [modal v] [adv] [vb infin] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I think it is very peculiar that someone can just give evidence , like Sir Hal Millar , and not be cross-examined on it at all . ’
2 This sweeping view of our species makes it clear that we must urgently learn from our past to plan for our future .
3 The current economic conditions are particularly challenging and it is clear that we must increasingly earn our living by ingenuity and innovation .
4 However , in a statement issued on June 30 the Khmers Rouges made it clear that they would only accept a SNC with representation from the four parties on an equal footing .
5 Delegates rejected the concept of a federal state and made it clear that they would only accept a proportional representation system based on one-person-one-vote in a unitary state .
6 We were never confident the system was going to fly , and towards the end it became clear that they would never recover the cost of the investment ’ .
7 Although they discussed the mystery at length , it was clear that they would never reach a solution to the puzzle of the man 's presence at Thorsbury and whether or not it was with Tamar 's knowledge .
8 His officials were talking about " the man who came to dinner " and making it clear that he would just have to go before the Islamic summit that was scheduled to meet in Morocco in April .
9 From this it was clear that he would never renounce the latter post .
10 But it became clear that she would soon have to go out in the rain and get a bus to their sister convent .
11 She listens to him more than anyone , and it was his will which prevailed when she composed last year 's Christmas speech , in which she made it clear that she would never abdicate .
12 It is clear that she will never marry and have children , follow a career enjoy the leisure interests of her own age group or otherwise enjoy the quality of life which so many take for granted .
13 Following the discovery of surface dyslexia , it became clear that there should also exist another form of acquired dyslexia in which the ability to use assembled phonology was lost , while the ability to read a word via addressed phonology was intact .
14 Although there is much to be said for freedom of information , it is not clear that it would greatly help individual aggrieved citizens .
15 ‘ The Community as a whole should make it absolutely clear that it would warmly welcome East Germany joining West Germany on the basis that it was not admitting a new member state to the Community , but simply recognising the extension of the territory of an existing member ’ , he stated .
16 I felt free that I would never have to go back . ’
17 Eric Hammond of the Electrical , Electronic , Telecommunication and Plumbing Union said in The Daily Telegraph : ’ It is so fundamentally wrong that it will increasingly threaten Labour 's prospects of a national victory . ’
18 Funny that I can always tell what you 're thinking , is n't it ?
19 The nut is the main offender ; it 's so ludicrously high that you can easily slide a matchstick between the top string and the first fret .
20 But when she came up to me after that third seminar I was so shocked and embarrassed that I could barely speak .
21 In fact , we believe the concept is so popular that it may soon become a national , or even international event ’ .
22 Notes retails at around £400 a user ( with discounts on multiple purchases ) , and is getting so popular that it may well emerge as the de facto standard for disseminating information .
23 Indeed if one gives a little thought to the matter it becomes distinctly doubtful that one could ever establish anything even vaguely resembling a sheet of charge .
24 For the remainder of her half-hour set , the audience was treated to vintage Aurora Blake — in fact , it was doubtful that she 'd ever put on a more powerful show in any of the venues she 'd performed in all over the world .
25 It must now be doubtful that he will ever do so , doubtful , but not impossible that he should .
26 He regarded it with suspicion , as if afraid that it might suddenly sprout legs and run off .
27 Jack Butler closed the door , turned and leant against it , as if afraid that she might suddenly return with more horrors .
28 ‘ She and the beetle do n't do anything together in that way , but I am afraid that he will romantically take her away .
29 A relatively clear-cut organisation of this kind , later to become the typical form of internal structure of all foreign offices , had already been introduced in 1661 in Sweden , where the small machine for the control of foreign policy was still part of the royal chancery and hardly an independent entity at all ; but it is interesting that it should also have evolved relatively early in a country still so isolated and underdeveloped as Russia .
30 It is possible that they may also affect IFN γ binding to other cells involved in the colonic mucosal immune response .
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