Example sentences of "[vb -s] that the [noun] [be] " in BNC.

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1 She adds that the Faculty 's proposed grandfathering clause watered down the value of the qualification as far as the new examination entrant is concerned .
2 Sir Michael , now 88 , adds that the performance is very appropriate and he wishes it great success .
3 ‘ There was too much emphasis on how fast we could grow , ’ he says , but adds that the company is still turning down about 70 per cent of those who apply for an Amex card .
4 Mr Goodman adds that the company was fortunate to have started up in the recession , because services could be had more cheaply than in easier times .
5 He adds that the case is likely to take three years to sort out .
6 Foolish indeed is he who supposes that the music is only an excuse for the parties ; not only does everyone go , but everyone has opinions .
7 You could too , choose rather different wall treatments for the dining part : flame-proofed fabric ; wallpaper , a warm , dark paint , and add pictures , prints , objects , favourite collections , bookshelves , anything that emphasises that the space is as much for living as for working in .
8 The expression emphasises that the offence is not a ‘ victimless ’ one , but requires the actual presence of persons who are or are likely to be threatened , abused or insulted .
9 The evidence recovered by excavation emphasises that the landscape was being fully utilised by the inhabitants of farms dispersed across the landscape .
10 Bargh acknowledges the presence of a certain spiritual quality in ‘ Dust ’ , but emphasises that the work is also about impermanence .
11 Although it emphasises that the opportunities are not guaranteed to find success , market-orientated businesses should find them worth considering .
12 If the input data specifies that the structure is NOT to be modified then the user 's log file is closed and processing terminates .
13 But while it seems at first quite normal that this should happen at an inquest involving the opera 's central character one soon notices that the process is in fact highly artificial , like the narrations which open several of Britten 's later operas , designed in this instance to have the dramatis personae stand up and be recognised but in a context which fits the story .
14 Apart from the infiltration of the local anaesthetic , when the patient will feel a prick in the back , less painful than the anaesthetic for dental work , all that is felt is a pressure on the lower spine with occasionally a faint ‘ tingle ’ in one leg which simply signifies that the needle is in the right place .
15 Although we know nothing of her education , she writes that the Countess was ‘ directed ’ by a mother famed for her furtherance of Protestant and humanist learning , Catharine Bertie , dowager Duchess of Suffolk [ q.v. ] , and we may suppose that more than usual attention was paid to her reading .
16 In the flyer produced by Oxford University Press , Peter Fusco , Curator of European Sculpture and Works of Art at the J. Paul Getty Museum , writes that the catalogue is ‘ a work which every art library and student of sculpture will need to own ’ .
17 This illustrates that the regime is profoundly divided against itself . ’
18 At the top of this list is wally , which perhaps illustrates that the research was not conducted yesterday but the day before the day before then .
19 A more recent commentator on Marx 's concept of ideology , Jorge Larrain , accepts that the concept is vague and that it has to be worked out from what little Marx wrote ( Larrain 1979 : 36 ) .
20 Surely she accepts that the Government were right to provide compensation for haemophiliacs who became infected through contaminated blood factor 8 .
21 ‘ You may as well accept that he 's going to be around for a while — until he finally accepts that the club 's not for sale .
22 He accepts that the weapons are of no military value ; indeed , he thinks they should be taken out of readiness , even partially dismantled .
23 Walmsley looks at several possible explanations and concludes that the change is largely due to the Act itself , firstly in the simple sense that the passing of the 1967 Act brought to an end a trial period of uncertainty for the police by making quite clear that , although in the future homosexual acts in private between consenting adults were to be legal , such acts in ‘ public ’ as defined by the Act were not .
24 Subsequently , I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech to be delivered by my noble and learned friend , Lord Slynn of Hadley , in which he concludes that the decision is indeed reviewable and does so on grounds which I venture to find convincing .
25 Craig ( 1987 ) concludes that the trends are now back to the pre-industrialization pattern of population and that the ‘ 1911 type ’ may eventually turn out to have been exceptional .
26 Because , in numerical terms , fewer showed a relationship with depression than those which failed to do so , he concludes that the relationship is probably absent .
27 The priest finally concludes that the sheepskin is properly his , as he paid for it in goods not services .
28 With such a commitment , McDonnell-Douglas may then decide to pull out if it concludes that the industry is not big enough for three profitable producers .
29 The Report of HM Inspectorate concludes that the need is now paramount for careful planning to match the provision of courses more effectively to the needs of students and employers .
30 In the standard account of the party 's growth into a modern political organisation over the period 1910–24 , McKibbin ( 1974 ) concludes that the war was not of first importance to its ultimate rise to power :
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