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

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1 Putting the government 's abandonment of the PWRs in the context of the study , the conclusion must be that it decided that , under market force rules , carbon dioxide had to be allowed to win the day over nuclear power .
2 Stated in these simple terms , the anti-cruelty position 's most obvious weakness is that it assumes that we already know that trapping wild animals is justified , if only it is done ‘ as humanely as possible ’ .
3 The only real problem with this analysis is that it assumes that this is an unwitting decision by the individuals involved .
4 A more important problem with this treatment of the results is that it assumes that any particular rating means the same for all subjects .
5 The major criticism of this approach is that it assumes that all information about the organisation is kept in documents .
6 A third objection to the confessional approach is that it assumes that religion provides the adequate answer to the dilemmas facing society .
7 One problem with the adaptive expectations hypothesis is that it presumes that people do not learn from their past mistakes .
8 The bad news is that it appears that the Lundy company is not making enough money to cover its costs and is looking at ways of making the island more ‘ commercial . ’
9 An interesting additional finding which is stressed is that it appears that such people are more rather than less likely to exhibit qualities of psychological balance and social responsibility .
10 The advantage of the group system is that it ensures that members of the respective parties put forward clear cut views at the meetings of the council .
11 Perhaps the most important aspect of the scheme is that it ensures that guidance staff are not deployed as disciplinarians .
12 One of the dangers then in making a link between Spenser and certain current perspectives is that it suggests that Spenser 's view of England and Ireland is a founding discourse which iterates a cultural conflict intrinsic to English experience .
13 In the case of the simple penal code , the essential reason it is in the interest of a firm in this case to carry out the threat of punishment is that it believes that if it does not it itself will be punished .
14 An important aspect of the Esso case is that it illustrates that the restraint of trade doctrine is not simply applicable to those restraints which continue after the end of the contract period .
15 The rationale for this quantity rule is that it implies that no agents are forced to buy or sell quantities in excess of their wishes , so the rule preserves the principle of voluntary exchange .
16 The irony of this fascinating book is that it shows that Charlie Francis was doing very well as a coach without giving drugs to his athletes .
17 But the thing is that it seems that we 're a cultural the way the system is set up
18 The interest of this case is that it indicates that a sentence of detention in a young offender institution can be justified under Criminal Justice Act 1982 , s.1(4A) ( b ) , notwithstanding the fact that the offender was originally dealt with for the offences by means of a probation order .
19 This is because it assumes that only one of the candidates in each position is correct , so the assignment of scores to words has to be delayed until the maximum for any given position is known .
20 The genius of the Council of Chalcedon , in saying that Jesus is one person in both divine and human natures , was that it denied that the incarnation implied anything about the nature of God ( the meaning of ‘ God ’ ) , asserting simply that God , the mystery of Creation , is become a human being — not a divine kind of human being but a human kind of human being .
21 The most important point to come out of the Crabb affair was that it showed that the intelligence services were prepared to carry out operations contrary to the direct orders of the prime minister who was in charge of them .
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