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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Our conclusion , overall , is rather that a large book on Greece was not a serious possibility for long , if at all ; that the actual book written was , in an important sense , Wagnerian from the start ; but that , notwithstanding the extent of Wagner 's influence , there is no good reason to suppose that Nietzsche ever went against his own inclinations for Wagner 's sake , whether by adding material , changing it or suppressing it .
2 However , if it is right that a change is as good as a rest , you should now feel rested and ready to cope with anything .
3 It is enough that a project satisfy the purpose of ‘ the advancement of knowledge in biological or behavioural sciences , ( section 5.3(d) ) , although the applicant must then justify the necessity of using animals at all ( 5.5 ) , and in specific terms if the use of larger mammals is proposed ( 5.6 ) .
4 It 's just that a couple of ideas occurred to me , one of which will have occurred to you and one which you probably do n't know about .
5 ‘ It 's just that a few days ago I heard one of our members say something about Connie .
6 It 's just that a lot of the heads have worn they
7 But for a handful of obvious reasons , Lewis does not draw a picture of ‘ the whole man ’ in Surprised by Joy It is partly that a natural reticence made him draw a veil over the two greatest facts of his emotional history : his relationships with his father and Mrs Moore .
8 It is now that a man may pick the flowers and fruit of his lifetime , and complete his gardens of philosophy .
9 The argument is often that a classification designed in the South ( no matter what alterations exist for Shetland ) does not take specifically local conditions and local interests into account .
10 It is here that a massive scoreboard confronts the players , the numbers changed slowly , tantalisingly , by hand .
11 It is here that a true designing system will be based and will grow from an understanding of the conceptual activities , how they are developed and controlled .
12 IT IS HERE THAT A CITY AND ITS PEOPLE POSSESSED A PART OF MY SPIRIT .
13 It is here that a city and its people possessed a part of my spirit .
14 It is here that an anthropological observing participation comes into its own , for in living with the semantics of the system the analyst has the potential to undertake a rarely used method of social research .
15 It is here that an individual anthropomorphic interpretation of each animal enters the process and overlays generalised documentation .
16 The sentiment expressed in the phrase is simply that a strong EC should lay these foundations for the whole continent .
17 Or maybe it is simply that a second to them is a vastly longer subjective experience of time than it is to us and other creatures , possessed of a slower metabolic rate .
18 For others the trouble is simply that a concert ‘ lacks visuals .
19 In more mundane language , what we are saying is simply that a movement to a point along x could be executed in two steps , one along x and then another along y .
20 In many historical accounts , it is stated that late ME [ a ] developed into [ ae ] in the early seventeenth century ( it does not matter here what date is cited ; what is important is simply that a relatively exact date is cited ) .
21 It is simply that a feature , which seemed prominent in the stereotype , may appear insignificant in the performance , and vice versa .
22 It is simply that a permissive culture which makes increasingly fewer demands on the egos and superegos of its citizens where self-restraint , postponement of gratification and drive-inhibition in general are concerned must — unless it is to dissolve in anarchy — abrogate those restraining , controlling and inhibiting functions to itself and to its agencies of social control .
23 If screams do not cause a single person to react , what hope is there that a small , silent television screen in a bank of twenty-one such screens will be more effective ?
24 What chance is there that a start on such a package could be made in the near future ?
25 It is then that a conflict of interests may arise .
26 It is then that a crisis of autonomy can be most nearly identified with a crisis of identity , and can be seen in many an act of teenage rebellion .
27 It is seldom that a week passes by without my having several letters on the same theme .
28 … it is seldom that an appeal from its decision will lie .
29 The argument here is essentially that a gradation scheme might lead to a lighter sentence in certain cases than would otherwise have been imposed .
  Next page