Example sentences of "[adj] it [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 From this it followed that whoever was archbishop of Canterbury inherited all the powers that Gregory had given to Augustine , just as the pope inherited all the powers that Christ had given to St Peter .
2 In this it ensures that judgments are firmly tied to perceived aspects .
3 From this it seems that Nicholson 's dazzling display outclassed all others in the Chemical Section — including the rather pedestrian exhibit of Perkin & Sons .
4 From this it appears that they would have to become unrecognisable as potatoes before they could have been said to have perished .
5 From this it appeared that the father was the principal debtor in the sum of £299 .
6 From this it follows that wages ‘ become an imaginary value without content ’ .
7 From this it follows that , if a given command is held on , the result is a steadily increasing speed .
8 — From this it follows that we can not be dealing with the same concept of experience here .
9 From this it follows that they satisfy the exclusion principle .
10 From this it follows that we could give some account of what it might mean to ‘ change the context ’ in the sense in which Fillmore ( 1977 : 119 ) envisages this when he says ‘ I … find myself asking what the effect would have been if the context had been slightly different . ’
11 From this it follows that a degree of decision-making power about how society 's resources should be used has been transferred from the market to the enterprise .
12 Secondly , from this it follows that the compulsion may take the form of ‘ economic duress ’ if the necessary facts are proved .
13 From this it follows that , other things being equal , an expansion of bank deposits entails an increase in the officially measured money supply .
14 From this it follows that s62(4) applies to transactions where the sale is a complete sham , ie where the owner purports to sell goods to a creditor in order to raise secured finance while retaining possession .
15 it 's just that with this it means that you 've finalized it in your name .
16 In Balston Ltd v Headline Fillers Ltd [ 1987 ] FSR 330 it appears that an express confidential information clause which sought to protect secrets other than " business secrets " ( in the narrow sense that that phrase is used in Faccenda Chicken v Fowler ; see pp78-9 below ) was subjected by Scott J to the restraint of trade doctrine ( see also Harman J in Systems Reliability Holdings plc v Smith [ 1990 ] IRL R 377 ) .
17 In 1972 it expected that the new system of fewer and larger local authorities would prove more efficient .
18 Where this is high it suggests that an additional sampling station might be set up .
19 To the extent that activities are spontaneous it appears that they belong to the realm of the caused ( which in the case of biological process is obvious enough ) , and that he is a free agent only to the extent that he learns to direct them .
20 On Aug. 22 it emerged that Shaikh Bachir Fekih , a member of the FIS , had attended the final round of negotiations in a personal capacity amidst reports of assurances by the Prime Minister , Sid Ahmed Ghozali , that the state of siege in force in the country since June 5 [ see p. 38312 ] would be lifted by Oct. 5 .
21 He spoke with the fervour of discovery , unaware it seems that he was by this date , imperially speaking , reinventing the wheel .
22 Including the ( necessary ) Lemma 1.2.1 it appears that our proof of 1.2.2 depends on various properties of the = symbol together with several applications of A4 , A3 and D together with just one application of A2 .
23 In being normative it avows that it does not necessarily conform to everyone 's notion of authority in all detail .
24 When the late Conservative administration did its sums at the end of 1963 it found that its future programme worked out at an annual rate of increase of 4.1 per cent .
25 The more closely the dynamics behind mass unrest are examined , the clearer it becomes that mass political militancy was generated from below rather than whipped up from above , and that ‘ intelligentsia initiative was successful only when it reflected … basic popular impulse . ’
26 Nevertheless people decided to try it out , till in 1932 it seemed that the coup de grace to such activity had been delivered by the mathematician John von Neumann .
27 The Intervention Board withdrew the facility with six weeks notice , because it maintained , it was uneconomical it noted that last year the average weekly throughput for steers was less than four animals a week .
28 Instead , in December 1984 it announced that a 30 per cent cut was becoming ‘ an aim of policy ’ .
29 The danger with this was that the longer it went on the more likely it became that both players and fans would get their priorities wrong , so that the feeling of ‘ we may as well concentrate on what we 're good at and not bother too much about Tests ’ would become steadily more predominant .
30 The more days went by , the more likely it became that the end of the police search would be the discovery of a corpse .
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