Example sentences of "[vb infin] [that] it [be] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 In reality , the only difference between the two media is that the public knows how newspapers get their stories — though they do n't know that it 's exactly the same way as people in television get them .
2 But do you know that it 's actually saved you from losing any of these employees .
3 I do n't know that it 's terribly clean .
4 Caspar , genuinely appalled , said , ‘ But do n't you know that it 's almost the most dangerous place in the whole of Ireland ? ’
5 You do n't know that it 's there but I do .
6 erm I think I do n't know that it 's so much class , I think it 's just this image of girls do this and or women do that and men do the other .
7 When you if if you think about a country of song you might think of Wales , but anybody visiting Ireland will know that it 's really Ireland 's got to be a country of song because if you go there you 've got to sing .
8 Stavanger has a considerable holding of Ingard stock , but he must know that it is largely worthless .
9 But she must know that it is n't clever to be asked to leave a country while on assignment .
10 Anyone who has been instrumental in this transformation of another person 's life through the impact of the Word of God and the Spirit of God will know that it is not his own doing .
11 He should know that it is not the Government who take action in these matters , but the Attorney-General .
12 But how do we know that it is vocationally advantageous to study history or to put it the other way round , that to study history is not vocationally disadvantageous ?
13 I am sure this happens , but I do n't know that it is any more so than for most other serious books , including the Bible and Shakespeare .
14 They should also know that it is very important that there must be established in the child 's mind at a very early age a dawning awareness of the fact that for all his life he will be required to submit to control from some source or other .
15 Do you know that it is far better to train by reward than by punishment ?
16 ‘ You are an apprentice historian and therefore should know that it is only in this century that this attempt to sanitise death has stricken our race .
17 We do know that it was not until the late summer of 1965 that he gave private indications of his intention to stand for a second term , and not until 4 November that he made his decision public .
18 Little did he know that it was n't a smile , but a grimace of pain .
19 Of course the inspectorate is highly respected in Wales , but the hon. Gentleman will know that it was never geared to carry out inspections with the frequency that we expect will result from the provisions of the Education ( Schools ) Bill and that we envisage in the parents charter .
20 I do n't know that it was actually a shop
21 No-one with even a passing knowledge of tax would doubt that it is now one of the most complex areas of an accountant 's work .
22 No one can doubt that it is far better to aim to prevent job problems arising than to try to cure them by means of a law suit .
23 Even this affects church life , as I shall show , but we must recognise that it is not only rank hedonism that flourishes under private banners .
24 However , he should recognise that it is not just the consumer who responds to ‘ market forces ’ .
25 and I think we must recognise that it is only that many of the questions and questionnaire had they been displayed of what they wanted to propose .
26 Here the value of privacy may act against the interests of family members ; neighbours may consider that it is not their business to interfere and the beaten wife-at least before the growth of women 's self-help centres — may find that she has nowhere to go ( Pizzey , 1974 ) .
27 So let us look at the present day , and to take this wording , do you consider that it is now appropriate that Skelton should expand any further ?
28 erm For example if erm two people are walking down the street and there 's a certain amount of jostling , then the victim , if he is a victim , may well consider that it 's not violent , or that it 's nothing out of the ordinary , or that it 's something which is acceptable , and then not take the matter any farther .
29 I must stress that it was not a first-hand observation , but in fact is third-hand .
30 Given my hon. Friend 's well-known commitment to productivity , efficiency and careful spending of money in the public sector , I am surprised by her suggestion and I do not think that it is tremendously sensible .
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