Example sentences of "clear that from " in BNC.

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1 They have made it clear that from October 1991 aid disbursements will be conditional on improvements in the human rights record of the Sri Lankan government .
2 Stepson of a rabbi and product of a broken home , Laszlo was brought up in an orphanage , and it is clear that from a very early age this intense , obstinate man sought not only to bring order to his own life but to control to an unprecedented degree the environment of his future family .
3 In conclusion , it is clear that from this examination of the state of weaponry and warfare throughout the reign of Barbarossa , and given that he lived to the age of 70 , he must have experienced many of the gradual changes and improvements in arms and armour that occurred during the twelfth century .
4 What really counted was the attitude of government to the implementation and observance of legislation , especially at local level , and here it is clear that from the moment the Radical leader , Lerroux , first assumed the premiership in September 1933 a dramatic reaction set in .
5 However well the country may have been served by the largely unco-ordinated activities and initiatives of the past , we are clear that from now on they are not good enough .
6 So far as demand management is concerned , however , it is now clear that from the 1950s to the mid 1960s budgets were substantially in surplus and hence deflationary [ Matthews , 1968 ] .
7 The Ecumenical Centre says it is clear that from the very beginning the new regime planned to eliminate the media from the political scene .
8 However , we can not be sure , for it is clear that from Mesolithic times onwards the frequency of brachycephaly was increasing continually in some parts of Europe .
9 I should make it absolutely clear that from 1 January 1993 we shall continue to maintain our frontier controls , particularly on matters of international crime , drugs and immigration .
10 Also , although there were marked fluctuations in the number of admissions from year to year , it is clear that from about 1490 the numbers of those admitted at York were consistently lower than they had been from the mid 1380s to the 1440s .
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