Example sentences of "[adv] that it is [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Britain was the fastest to decentralize. suggesting perhaps that it is in an advanced stage of industrial-urban evolution compared with much of Europe , though behind the trends observed for the United States .
2 Each gesture in a sequence must be carefully timed so that it is of proper value to the whole .
3 The notional expenditure level assessed by the GRE plays a vital role in the process of allocation for the Block Grant element of the Rate Support Grant , so that it is of considerable importance for the assessment procedure to be equitable .
4 Now suppose that the electron 's mass is increased 207 times ( so that it is like a muon ) while it remains subject to the same attractive force holding it around the proton .
5 It is almost one degree away from the polar point ; it is 120 light-years away and only about six times as luminous as the Sun , so that it is by no means the equal of the northern hemisphere 's Polaris .
6 There is no real connection ; the Coal Sack is no more than 500 light-years away , so that it is in the foreground .
7 M4 , a globular , is only about 1 degree from Antares , so that it is in the same binocular field and can be found at once ; it is on the fringe of naked-eye visibility , but is comparatively loose , so that a telescope is needed to resolve it .
8 As has already been pointed out in section I .2 , practical redistributional measures are not costless , so that it is in all probability more efficient to tell the telephone company it has to bear the expense of maintaining rural telephone boxes than to fund these separately .
9 It has been suggested therefore that the monitor panel might be sited on the pillar between the two windows so that it is in the line of vision of staff .
10 ( 2 ) Choose a poem ( the same one as in exercise 1 if you like ) , and put the title after the first stanza , so that it is in the middle of the poem instead of at the beginning .
11 Hence at balance Although at first sight this may appear to be a single balance condition , in order to be satisfied , the real and imaginary parts of the two sides of the equation must be separately equal so that it is in fact a double balance condition as anticipated .
12 On the other hand , there is no alternative to understanding the world through interpretations and models and hence through what are , in the last analysis , intellectual fictions whose warrant is only that it is as if they were true .
13 They also avoid the division of parts , as if it were something of extreme difficulty , and forget altogether that it is by no means necessary to have all the voices singing all the time .
14 He did this so effectively that it is to this day referred to as the Wallace Line .
15 BREWIN Dolphin , the London-based private client stockbrokers , confirmed yesterday that it is in talks with Bell Lawrie White , its Edinburgh-based counterpart , which could create one of the largest private client brokers in the UK .
16 Looking at this as one of the points of research avoids some of the narrowness of the kind of conception that has tended to dominate thinking about social research , namely that it is about testing theoretical explanations of the facts .
17 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 .
18 After all the doubts and uncertainties , wrote Harsnet , most of which I did not admit to myself , or else tried to pretend were an integral part of the project , sense now that it is on its way .
19 But now that it is in power , and dependent on an assembly made up largely of landowners , the government seems to find that option less attractive .
20 Before that it is worth reiterating Althusser 's holistic view of the individual , and introducing an analogy which he takes from Marx .
21 In spite of all that has been said by popular moralists , along the lines of honesty being the best policy , everyone really knows implicitly that it is by this test of universalisability that one should determine what one ought to do .
22 There 's an ecumenical consensus nowadays surely that it is by faith and baptism that one is made a Christian or becomes a Christian and we 've also inherited , many of us , another rite , with its origins in the New Testament , valuable in the making of a christian and the three strands in confirmation set out in the report before us would certainly be owned by all of us .
23 And maybe that it is in line with some of the the central targets of their appraisal .
24 The reason that it has received so much attention is not primarily that it is of practical importance ( although it has applications , e.g. Sections 26.2 , 26.5 , 26.6 ) , but rather that it has become a context for the development of ideas about the consequences of instability and evolution towards turbulent motion .
25 Finally , I urge again that it is of crucial importance to remember the factual context in which these problems may arise .
26 It further assumes that no clothing is purchased which is not absolutely necessary for health and assumes too that it is of the plainest and most economical description . ’
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