Example sentences of "evident that [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It was evident that without three hands James Pegg could not have infiltrated poison into the soup bowl .
2 It is evident that over the last hundred years or so mid realizations have been spreading at the expense of low realizations .
3 It was evident that for many young people the ‘ image ’ of the bookshop was old fashioned , dusty , a place for scholarly introverted people , and so on .
4 As every new discovery was made it was evident that with Operation Cyril a gang of really organised and astute professional smugglers had been broken .
5 Therefore eqn ( 9.22 ) holds , and because P NR increases more rapidly with density than P G it is evident that at large enough density the pressures would reach equilibrium ; the star would then stop shrinking .
6 ‘ It is very evident that since the publication of the paperback the campaign against it has subsided , to such an extent that even one of my most hardline critics , the British Muslim Dr Kalim Siddiqui , was recently quoted in the Guardian as saying it is time to forgive and forget , which is a rather extraordinary volte-face from someone who was until recently asking for my head on a plate .
7 It is quite evident that in some areas farming has become a distinctly precarious occupation but , in exchanging the effects of the EC 's Common Agricultural Policy for the need to produce results in a rugby field , Hare may find that he has jumped out of the frying pan into the fire .
8 About the middle of 1942 it became evident that in order to make the night bombing raids over Germany more effective , some form of air marking would have to be developed to guide the aircraft more accurately to their targets .
9 It is evident that in many of our residential areas no such balance any longer exists , for the street has been given over entirely to the car , with other functions now expected to be subordinate to it .
10 But more than that , it was evident that in struggling to attain a communal harmony which was in all likelihood unattainable , Britain ran the risk of throwing away her only chance of retiring from India in good order .
11 If one closely observes both designs , i.e. the ‘ eyes ’ of the Cobra and the Wandjina image ( see photographs p.63,64 ) , the similarity appears so strikingly evident that in consideration of the metaphysical aspects of the Rainbow Serpent , the Spectacled Cobra , the Wandjina and the Cobra 's hood markings , the point is further amplified .
12 Setting such contentions assertions aside , it is evident that in terms of all the human and material resources it contains , the Pacific is indeed a remarkable prize .
13 It was evident that in neither the ECSC nor EDC could the supranational agencies have powers commensurate with their responsibilities : the ECSC was already giving indications of the resilience of national governments .
14 This paradox is nowhere more evident that in Novosibirsk — Russia 's third largest city , in Western Siberia .
15 It is evident that in some areas the local political parties were intent on retaining control .
16 Postwar economic growth , especially in the past decade of celebration of free enterprise and markets , has generated a more or less universal acquisitiveness , and it is far from evident that in circumstances in which the desires which have been aroused can not be gratified , or their pursuit breeds disillusionment , socialism , historically grounded in the labour movement , does or can now provide a new direction .
17 It is very evident that in the early months of the Truman administration the new US president was far from settled in his views on foreign policy , not least because of the divided counsels of those around him .
18 It was evident that by the end of the seventies Britain would be self-sufficient in oil and was likely to remain so , depending on depletion policy , until at least the end of the century .
19 Putting aside these perhaps superfluous thoughts , it is nevertheless evident that from the beginning some students prefer to write ‘ differently ’ but lack the technical resources to do so competently .
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