Example sentences of "[noun] that the [noun] [be] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The hon. Gentleman is merely trying to raise obscure scares about our proposals when he knows from his own visit to the association that the policy is extremely popular with all the principals and that his statement — that the colleges would be given back to his friends in Labour councils — was greeted with widespread dismay there .
2 It says a lot about the quality of US diplomatic thinking that the Americans were flattered to be put on the same level as the Soviet rulers .
3 The title ‘ Head of the Commonwealth ’ , against which from the government benches I registered a lone protest upon the second reading of the Royal Titles Bill in March 1953 , enshrines a paradox which thirty years ago two countries in particular conspired for their own purposes to ignore : India , in order to become a republic while forfeiting none of the privileges which allegiance had conferred , and Britain , in order to feed its delusion that the Empire was being transformed into something brighter and better still .
4 At the turn of the eleventh and twelfth centuries the Norman Anonymous ( formerly known as the Anonymous of York ) wrote that ‘ the king reigns with Christ ’ , reflecting the common doctrine of the tenth and early eleventh centuries that the king was Christ 's vicar , that he was rex et sacerdos , that although he could not administer the sacraments , he ruled over the Church as well as over his temporal kingdom , that all authority was vested in him .
5 Amdahl Corp , Fujitsu Ltd and Hitachi Ltd are devastatingly exposed to the new perception that the mainframe is dead meat , and Storage Technology Corp and Memorex Telex NV will have their work cut out getting out from under .
6 Parental puissance , for the child , is enormous ; one of the first disillusionments , for many of us , lies in the perception that the parent is not all powerful but only relatively so .
7 Weekend talk of policy rifts at the highest level and of impending recession , and a perception that the Government is most reluctant to raise interest rates again , caused sterling to collapse to its lowest against the Deutschemark since the celebrated events of March last year .
8 Similarly , a perception that the brain is involved in the outworking of mental processes does not mean that the mind arises from the physical brain .
9 Attlee attacked the very basis of the perception that the Mediterranean was crucial to Britain in time of war , arguing that with the development of air power the resources needed to protect sea routes from Gibraltar to Suez would be impossible to find .
10 This explains the difficulty with the first sentence in ( 30 ) , for example , repeated here as ( 57 ) : ( 57 ) Eddy will present the cheque to the winner happy happy can hardly be anything but non-restrictive here by the sense of the situation , but the corresponding requirement of form is not matched by ( 57 ) ; hence the clear perception that the result is ungrammatical .
11 NEIL KINNOCK yesterday hailed the Labour conference as a celebration of party unity and a demonstration to the electorate that the party was fit to govern Britain .
12 Erm logic suggests surely that that erm one should concentrate on the adequacy of the phasing er the existing phasing mechanism , and the words within policy H one and the guidance that the county is giving to the to the district authorities , in how they should phase the release of the committed land .
13 When Kit , informed by his scout that the enemy was present , gave the first order to fire , the soft promise of the light burst into flame ; the vanguard of the islanders fell back from the English muskets .
14 As he fell , John Taylor , 48 , banged his head with such force that the noise was heard by people further along the street .
15 The young woman lay across the floor of her spotless kitchen , her skull smashed with such force that the brain was exposed .
16 He believed " in the depth of my heart and consciousness that the initiatives being taken are not liable to guarantee peace and harmony " and felt unable to continue to honour his pledge as President .
17 His career coincided with the rise of the legendary Celtic side of the late '60s which not only won the European Cup in Lisbon in 1967 but exerted such a dominance in Scottish football that the rest were also-rans .
18 it will it will depend on the level of investment that the bidder is prepared to put in we 're being very flexible , responding to the market forces
19 North once told Secord that he had gone so far as to mention to the President that the Ayatollah was helping the contras .
20 This is quite wrong , and leads to a tremendous waste of examination time , as well as exasperation in the mind of the examiner — an emotion that the candidate is very unwise to arouse !
21 If , on the other hand , it never occurred to the defendant that the victim was young or mentally abnormal , and he was not aware therefore that he was in a situation of potential risk , he should not be liable for rape providing that he took reasonable steps to ascertain that she did agree to vaginal penetration , for in such a case his conduct is reasonable in the light of the facts as he perceived them to be .
22 It is clear , therefore , that the consideration stated would not raise an implied promise by the defendant that the horse was sound or free from vice .
23 What is unique about capitalism is that exploitation and surplus labour can exist even within a system of free labour markets , so creating the illusion that the worker is also free ; but as Marx points out this is not the case .
24 The illusion that the country was performing adequately persisted , however , well into the second half of this century — partly because the empire provided protected markets for products that were not good enough for the most advanced countries , partly because of the accident of victory in two world wars .
25 Whatever else we do tonight , we should reject the cruel illusion that the ERM is the great magic system that can give the people the stability they desire — in real life we can promise that to no one .
26 The novel proves that knowledge is possible , but also that it is in a sense artificial : it does not come from the past , historical knowledge in particular can not simply be uncovered , laid bare and put out to view ( or rather , the novelist can no longer create the illusion that the past is speaking for itself ) ; it is a construction of the past , and the reader is conscious of , and in compliance with , the careful disposition and organization of the disparate elements that go to make up the whole edifice .
27 Moreover , since Libyans voted ( sata : ‘ to give voice ’ ) without benefit of attendant hustings , they had no illusion that the outcome was determined by the multiple decisions of individual minds concerned with policy or ideology .
28 The human has the illusion that the file is a single , orderly array , only because the computer is careful to keep records ‘ pointing ’ to the addresses of all the fragments dotted around .
29 Recently , however , it has been given added emphasis and urgency by the growing appreciation that the damage being done to the environment by the use of fossil fuels may require drastic restrictions on their use .
30 The allegation that the Liberals were selling honours in return for political contributions was brutally clear .
  Next page