Example sentences of "[be] [conj] it is [verb] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ All signs are that it is making a real impact in reducing the spread of Aids , ’ Mr Roberts said .
2 ‘ Industrial drug research is facing a crisis ’ was the headline of a British Medical Journal editorial recently ; and all the indications in Cured to Death are that it is going to get worse .
3 The main criterion for an effective service must be that it is staffed by experienced professionals who are appropriately qualified .
4 It is too often assumed that if a law is not designed to protect one man from another its only rationale can be that it is designed to punish moral wickedness , or in Lord Devlin 's words ‘ to enforce a moral principle ’ .
5 The unprimed will not necessarily be diagonal as it should be if it is to satisfy the first part of eqn ( 6.16 ) .
6 It was not known yesterday what the exact number of redundancies would be but it is hoped that they can be achieved voluntarily .
7 … in-service training is often much less effective than it could be because it is based on an ‘ educational model ’ i.e. is focussed largely on the individual .
8 We are also very strongly influenced by our expectations ; if we have heard and understood half a sentence , it seems that our brain is already guessing at what the rest of it will be before it is heard , and is certainly not acting in a passive way like a simple machine .
9 The probable significance of all this is that it is mistaken to attempt to generalize about employers ' attitudes to young workers .
10 The government 's official line is that it is aiming for an agreement with East Germany on monetary matters by the end of next month ; it does not deny reports that D-Day for GEMU could be July 1st .
11 What is extraordinary is that it is taking off in England — the land of the Stiff Upper Lip , where the primary emotion often seems to be fear of embarrassment .
12 The downside of the book is that it is written in a terribly deadpan style : ‘ At forty-five Picasso had become a successful man .
13 One view of the overall employment implications of new technology is that it is bringing about the collapse of work .
14 The reason is that it is based , not on discernible facts , but on stories and writings that have been created by man himself in an era of his history obtaining long before he had learned that , if he were so minded , he could use his intellectual power to establish facts on which to build the structure , not only of his religion , but of the whole of his society .
15 The particular value of task-centred work is that it is based on an intention to form an agreement or contract between the client and the worker , thus freeing the client from the burden of always being a grateful recipient .
16 The real merit in this suggestion is that it is based upon ( in principle ) easily observed magnitudes those calculating the bonus need know only about price , output and cost levels in each period ; they do not need to estimate either demand or cost functions .
17 There is moreover a further difficulty with the thesis which is that it is based upon a dichotomy between fact and value which is hard to sustain .
18 The problem with this approach however is that it is based on opportunism rather than commitment .
19 But let us be clear about just what it is that it is seeing .
20 A final reason for the possible failure of an appraisal system is that it is conducted as a top down , rather than a bottom up approach .
21 The reality of the process of change is that it is conducted in context .
22 Its other main claim to fame is that it is credited with inventing the word tweed to describe the famous cloth first made in the area .
23 What gives this discussion an additional interest , though , is that it is incorporated into an ambitious overarching historical schema , which aims to ‘ explain' nothing less than the whole development of world music .
24 He added : ‘ The picture we are getting is that it is spreading nationally .
25 The disparity between the revenue raised by the BBC in Scotland and the resources allocated by London to Scotland , reported today , highlights just how crucial is the debate over the BBC 's charter and how vital it is that it is made much more prominent in Scottish life .
26 The reason for keeping women and men separated is that it is felt that a man can not concentrate on prayer when women are in close proximity .
27 The third feature of English discovery to be noted is that it is limited to the discovery of documents .
28 In fact , the dilemma of any national state in cultural terms is that it is charged with defending cultural patrimony within a world market over which it exercises little control .
29 This is probably why , for most Prague linguists , part of the definition of theme is that it is given and part of the definition of rheme is that it is new .
30 The danger of adopting a systems approach uncritically is that it is assumed that it is sufficient to identify system structures and to portray the multitudinous variables involved in a particular system which then reinforces the first law of ecology as graphically described by Commoner ( 1972 ) that everything is connected to everything else .
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