Example sentences of "it is [adv] [verb] that there " in BNC.
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1 | However , it is strongly advised that there is only one LIFESPAN user with the MANAGER privilege — please contact Sema Software Technology Technical Support Department for further advice . |
2 | However , it is strongly advised that there is only one LIFESPAN user with the MARKETING privilege — please contact Sema Software Technology Technical Support Department for further advice . |
3 | However , it is strongly advised that there is only one LIFESPAN user with the OFFLINE MANAGER privilege — please contact Sema Software Technology Technical Support Department for further advice . |
4 | However , it is strongly advised that there is only one LIFESPAN user with the MANAGER privilege — please contact Sema Software Technology Technical Support Department for further advice . |
5 | The term substantial steps is used because prior to that stage it is generally assumed that there is nothing for the offeror to disclose publicly . |
6 | It is generally recognised that there is a great deal of information in the speech wave — particularly prosodic information — which we are not yet able to isolate and use . |
7 | It is frequently denied that there is a relationship between religion and violence in Ireland . |
8 | Because the level of transactions was so high ahead of the slump in house prices , it is widely believed that there is a substantial number of homeowners waiting to sell when prices do start to recover . |
9 | It is widely known that there are harmful effects from inhalation of outfall from a lead works ; for children who ingest it by licking lead-painted toys ; and for families whose drinking water is supplied through lead pipes . |
10 | To continue with the example of India , it is well documented that there was a massive economic ‘ drain' which transferred substantial export surpluses of goods and bullion to Britain . |
11 | It is well documented that there are geographical variations in both health status and health care expenditure within Britain . |
12 | It is well established that there are voters whose preferences are influenced by the alphabetical sequence in which candidates ' surnames appear on the ballot paper . |
13 | An undertaking is defined in reg 3 of the Transfer Regulations as including any trade or business , and as a result of a series of cases ( Kenmir Ltd v Frizzell [ 1968 ] 1 All ER 414 ; Batchelor v Premier Motors ( Romford ) Ltd COIT 1359/181 19.11.82 ; Premier Motors ( Medway ) Ltd v Total Oil ( GB ) Ltd [ 1984 ] ICR 58 ; Spijkers v Gebr Benedik Abattoir CV [ 1986 ] 2 CMLR 296 ) it is well established that there will be a transfer of an undertaking for the purpose of the Transfer Regulations only if " the business concerned is transferred as a going concern " . |
14 | But it is well known that there is a prejudice against awarding the bigger gongs to those who have fled England : especially for Switzerland . |
15 | It is well known that there has been widespread acceptance of restrictive trade measures falling outside the formal GATT rules , e.g. voluntary export restraints and anti-dumping legislation . |
16 | It is also hoped that there will be a surplus of profit , allowing you to take a tax free lump sum . |
17 | It is also claimed that there has been a great deal of harassment of Serbs and Montenegrins by Albanian nationalists , who hope to drive them out and establish an ‘ ethnically pure ’ Kosovo . |
18 | It is also known that there are people in mental handicap hospitals who are not and have never been mentally handicapped . |
19 | Perhaps it is indeed learning that there is no escape from the shock — and such learning may be very important to its subsequent behaviour . |
20 | It is most common in older people and it is often believed that there is no cure because it is a sign that the body is wearing out . |
21 | As a consequence , it is often argued that there is a greater need for additional performance measures , and that these measures should be more detailed in non-profit organizations ; in other words , that the wider accountability questions are more immediate and important . |
22 | It is often said that there can be no confidence in iniquity . |
23 | It is often considered that there is much greater sexual tolerance than used to be the case and the public response to homosexuality and lesbianism is sometimes cited as evidence for this . |
24 | From the practical standpoint , it is often claimed that there is never enough time to write objectives ; that their use removes the spontaneity from teaching ; and finally that from a clinical point of view they are inappropriate , as much of the teaching is ‘ crisis , teaching and can not be foreseen nor planned . |
25 | In vertical mergers it is often claimed that there are important gains to co-ordination and planning . |
26 | Because we are dealing with what purport to be exceptions to a general principle , it is sometimes argued that there is no single legal principle of justification , merely a number of disparate responses to the specific factual and legal details of a particular case.13 Alternatively , a general principle of justification is advanced and given the name of ‘ necessity ’ or ‘ privilege ’ or some kind of ‘ comprehensive justification in relation to medical procedures ’ . |
27 | It is sometimes claimed that there are languages without true tenses , for example Chinese or Yoruba , and this is correct in the sense that such languages may lack L-tenses morphologically marked in the verb , or indeed systematically elsewhere ( Comrie , 1976a : 82ff ; Lyons , 1977a : 678-9 ) . |
28 | It is sometimes admitted that there are dangers in this in that they can take the wrong decisions , about new technology , or marketing a product , or about industrial relations , and it is implied that if these decisions lead to the wrong strategy then all will be lost for everyone . |
29 | [ 8 ] It is classically imagined that there exists direct and reliable neural machinery which detects events in the tissue and transmits the information to a centre where the sensation of pain is generated . |
30 | It is commonly found that there is an interval of about six months between , firstly , the family member getting into recovery from his or her own " family disease " and learning to practise " tough love " and cease " enabling " the disease to continue by covering up its consequences and , secondly , the primary sufferer coming to seek recovery . |