Example sentences of "[vb -s] that [noun pl] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 As for British citizens falling foul of the regime , Mr Marlow believes that ‘ No country can be expected to operate a differential system of justice in favour of foreigners ’ , although he adds that benefits can accrue from the exercise of ‘ justified clemency ’ .
2 The department adds that GPs must remain free to send patients to hospitals with which their district has no contract .
3 The Circular emphasises that parents must be seen as ‘ partners ’ in the assessment process , although the evidence is that parents are by no means equal partners here .
4 This emphasises that goods must fulfil three basic conditions :
5 It emphasises that airlines should get together to find ways of combating terrorism .
6 Third , the Bank emphasises that devaluations must be accompanied by other policies .
7 Section 324 specifies that directors must disclose their shareholdings in the company in question and its related companies , while s.325 makes it obligatory for the company to keep a record of all of its directors ' interests .
8 This code , which is still adhered to , specifies that roofs must be made of slate , all woodwork must be white , and walls must be built in local stone or rendered white ; it also specifies that houses must be a certain distance apart .
9 This code , which is still adhered to , specifies that roofs must be made of slate , all woodwork must be white , and walls must be built in local stone or rendered white ; it also specifies that houses must be a certain distance apart .
10 This example illustrates that notes can be repeated in a melody , and that one can re-use a previous note which has already been passed over .
11 Everyone accepts that pits will close but there seems little chance of the government being deflected by another rebellion among Tory M Ps .
12 Wagner concludes that managers should strive to increase market share , lower relative costs and/or achieve high product quality , and that any investment activity must be directed at at least one of these aims if it is to prove successful .
13 The article concludes that ASWs need be aware of potential sexist GP practice , that their psychosocial perspective is critical to assessment and that ASW training should include gender issues .
14 In fact , Holder concludes that governments should adopt the basic business model of financial reporting .
15 It seems then that the most plausible form of logical empiricism holds that statements can be divided into two classes , those that are strongly verifiable and those that are not strongly verifiable themselves but are confirmable and disconfirmable by appeal to the strongly verifiable ones .
16 The study 's author , Michael Cameron , thinks that roads should be treated like telephone lines or the electricity supply : if customers want to use them at peak times , they should pay more .
17 Against the evidence of the German authorities and the German police , and given that even the Israeli secret service thinks that others may have been involved , would it not at least be a sensible plan to talk to the Arab League about the very serious problem of Lockerbie and at least consider accepting the request to send British and American judges in the first instance to a trial under Libyan law ?
18 If they agree and the Minister thinks that matters should be re-examined , I think that he has the power — correct me if I am wrong — to call them in .
19 He thinks that employers will go for the cheapest labour they can .
20 It postulates that agents will have an incentive to seek out information on the underlying ‘ correct ’ model of the economy which , in combination with adaptive expectations , had accounted for the systematic errors of the past .
21 Nancy appreciates that others might need more time than she takes , to absorb and follow her instructions .
22 Although the ACOC has hired Mark Mac Cormack 's fiercely commercial Trans World International to sell television rights worldwide , Ehman insists that deals will be signed on the criterion of the best coverage , rather than most money .
23 Mrs Thatcher is one of the few senior politicians who takes pride in stating her political convictions and insists that policies should derive from a coherent set of principles .
24 On telemarketing , the code insists that companies must ring up prospective clients at reasonable hours , do not use high pressure sales tactics and allow prospective purchasers a ‘ cooling off ’ period during which they can change their minds .
25 The convention insists that signatories should aim to treat their own hazardous wastes at home , as the greenest countries ( chart 8 ) have notably failed to do .
26 The alternative candidate for the honour of being the liberal theory of contracts insists that obligations should only arise in order to discourage and compensate harm to the interests of others .
27 It agrees that companies should be publicly accountable in return for the privilege of limited liability , it says , but that accountability lies in filing the accounts , rather than their audit .
28 John Chadwick ( 1976 , p. 157 ) agrees that transactions would have been easier if prices were agreed in terms of a base-commodity — whether gold or silver or something else — but there seems to be no evidence of this in the archive tablets .
29 Everybody agrees that accounts ought to be useful .
30 Everybody agrees that jobs will go .
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