Example sentences of "[adj] [adv] [is] that " in BNC.

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1 The reason I 'm I 'm bringing this up is that the gentleman in question wants to come to the parish council and put on a a short video of the electricity board 's er er activities in this area .
2 The re the reason I bring this up , the reason I bring this up , you 've supported that in the past you know , they 've said , those in the you would agree with that , so the reason I bring this up is that if you we start off by offering a full service across the whole week .
3 The only thing that 's different now is that if Middlesbrough win their last two , we 're not in the driving seat . ’
4 So what 's interesting here is that they seem to be having a conversation about un the university matters , the history department and so on but in fact there 's this kind of subtext going on here in which both of them want to find out about the other person 's children and both of them are being very mysterious and avoiding the question .
5 The reason for this however is that the base is low and unless population growth is strictly controlled this increase will result in little or no per capita benefit .
6 What is clear however is that the liberating influence of peer group learning , the facility to discuss with other commonly faced problems , to share common interests , and to relate directly their experiences to our own , in our own terms , is a powerful learning tool for social development .
7 Fact recognition method it 's a piece of hardware and one of the things that 's clear actually is that er the Alexander worlds and all sorts of other people that were working on this do n't look at them in this way and they look at these as I say ram blocks .
8 Most noticeable perhaps is that the dead minister of the newspaper account is removed completely , thereby channelling attention towards the sick minister in the vignette .
9 What is remarkable here is that have no longer evokes an effectual exercise of control .
10 What is unfortunate today is that scientists are still trying to build science on foundations that are known to be inadequate .
11 What we have said we are involved in a process which must involve both governments and all parties , whose objective is agreement among our divided people an agreement which all our traditions must give their allegiance and agreement , and an agreement which must express which which must respect our diversity , now I have kept repeating that statement since we made it and I asked anyone to tell me what they disagree with it , now the loyalist paramilitary some weeks ago said that if the I R A were to k their impression they 've given all along is that they 're just a reaction to the I R A and if the I R A were to stop they would cease immediately , I immediately put out a statement welcoming that statement by them , I also offered to talk directly to them , but they have refused er given the nature of their campaign , particularly at the moment , I begin to wonder do they want the I R A to stop ?
12 I think , I think the other thing is as well though is that when you , I mean you 've been sitting pensions cos I mean I had the P H I which I thought it was easier to actually describe erm but erm it 's easy for us to actually sit back and , and go back on everything that everyth er everybody else did wrong is n't it , so
13 Right , now if we look on , erm we come to Regional Action Networks , another reason why Amnesty seems not to allocate more than one prisoner and all now is that they have expanded the ways in which we deal with prisoners and the world is more or less been divided up into areas , erm , of smaller regions and groups are asked to choose one or two regions to deal with particularly and we , we have for quite a long time now erm been concerned with Southern Africa and Central America and we get information through on prisoners and what 's happening in those two regions , so John do you have anything else on Africa at all ?
14 What one can be absolutely sure about is that giving up does the other side 's work for them , and ruins all your own possible futures and other people 's as well .
15 Modern botanical science knows a lot about dominant and recessive genes ( which characteristics are dominant over others ) but despite all the science , the one thing that you can be sure about is that there is no certainty about which characteristics of either male or female parent will show through in their progeny .
16 One thing they are all quite sure about is that children are not like adults ; in particular they agree that children lack some capacity for rational thought which adults have .
17 The only thing that everybody seems to be sure about is that abortions will continue to be performed despite the new law .
18 For the work of Sherman this show may only confirm the suspicions already held by many that , with the kind of success she now enjoys after the Saatchi purchase of her notorious nude self-portrait , her intention is less than subversive and takes shrewd advantage of the fruits of sensationalism Saddest of all however is that , within the context of this show , the nightmarish images of her latest offerings succeed better at making the female viewer feel the full impact of the implied degradation .
19 My feeling now after driving them all again is that the direction , the aspirations of the range , are as middle of the road as ever .
20 m my , m my explanation of that though is that it 's true , i it could just be a hormonal side effect .
21 The only thing that worries me about taking that out is that you then create a massive empty space , if you have got
22 One very useful consequence of Lemma 3 above is that , if we want to prove a new algebraic law , it will usually be sufficient to prove it for finite programs , for example , consider the law unc This ( the conventional binary associative law of SEQ ) is not trivially deducible fro our existing laws , even though it is semantically true .
23 But what is important here is that , just as present-day language states are normally heterogeneous , so historical language states must also have been heterogeneous in similar ways ; hence , unilinear historical descriptions of single varieties ( such as ‘ standard ’ English ) can not be adequate descriptions of the history of a language .
24 But what is important here is that where allophonic variation in a phoneme class is discussed in the main handbooks and histories , this is usually variation that leads to a present-day characteristic of the standard variety .
25 What , I believe , makes Lewis 's view of the Bible so important today is that it is very similar to the view of the fathers of the primitive church .
26 What I find uncanny here is that a book which begins with a mocking suggestion about the literary critic as shaman , ends with a story in which Shakespeare is used by an explorer pretending to be a shaman among willing believers convinced of his power .
27 What is more disturbing today is that the Germans have been quicker and more successful to recognise the causes of the decline in their research community than we have in the UK .
28 The basic argument with which we are concerned here is that the low level of female crime is a result of the expectations and constraints that are placed on women by society .
29 What is important however is that they practised a strict form of communism .
30 One thing which is immediately apparent here is that the designers have been looking at the Music Man and Chandler ranges for their inspiration .
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