Example sentences of "suggested [adv] [that] " in BNC.

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1 There were thus many reasons , grounded in both Æthelred 's reign and his own , why individual churchmen may have harboured resentment against Cnut , and it will be suggested below that this could take a religious form .
2 Knowledge of him was so slim that the magazine Private Eye even suggested mischievously that the Department of Energy computer might have mistakenly selected him instead of another man of the same name .
3 I have suggested already that neither assurances , nor probably even ‘ Declarations ’ , are deemed by the Court of Justice to affect the law as defined by the Treaty of Rome , as amended .
4 I have suggested already that he is all The Dubliners combined — the lost child , the resigned girl , the lonely or frustrated man , the seeker of false comfort — now I want to come at his importance from a different angle .
5 It is suggested above that no public library can satisfy demand for all these types of material — least of all at a time of diminishing resources .
6 It was suggested above that the duty of care is best conceived as imposing essentially procedural standards .
7 I have suggested elsewhere that their presentation of their evidence benefits from closer examination .
8 I have suggested elsewhere that difficult behaviour at school can , in fact , reflect a readiness for work and the resentment at having that ambition frustrated ( Moore , 1984 ) .
9 It was suggested also that it would be useful to provide staff with a note describing the range and capability of some of the specialist software now installed on garden PCs .
10 ( It was suggested later that she had insisted they go . )
11 The old man had never suggested before that they have a drink together ; maybe it was all part of that new world he had entered when he stood in front of Mr Albert 's mirror in his new suit .
12 It has been suggested here that the mandatory penalty is relevant but not critical .
13 It is suggested here that the major curricular change of the future lies in what Fullan ( 1982 ) has described as the balance between cognitive and social development goals .
14 The relationship between teachers and pupils is in many ways similar to the relationship between other professionals and their clients , but it is suggested here that in an ideal sense ( and in many cases practically too ) it does have special characteristics which are fundamentally opposed to traditional ideas of professionalism .
15 This pessimism may have some truth given the present management approach within our schools but it is suggested here that if that managerial frame of reference was itself to be radically re-oriented , then teachers ' perceptions of their own professionality would also be powerfully affected and they may indeed come to feel that effective classroom activity was positively related to their performance in the wider school context .
16 It is suggested here that a new modus vivendi is required between the managerial and professional dimensions of school life .
17 It will be suggested here that , because each one of these terms carries with it connotations regarding what these processes are , ‘ learning ’ , ‘ acquisition ’ and ‘ development ’ are associated with different accounts of developmental change .
18 It is not being suggested here that the various factors bearing on class identification are totally independent variables .
19 However , it is suggested here that the prime factor attracting women to work in the 1980s lay rather in demand for labour from the service sector , albeit at comparatively low rates of pay ( Townsend , 1986a ) .
20 Yet the evidence presented suggested strongly that there was still a significant lack of long-term cooperation between finance and industry .
21 It was suggested then that the linear arrangement of linguistic elements plays a role in organizing messages at text level .
22 I have suggested then that postmodern signification is a de-differentiated ‘ regime of signification ’ on a number of counts :
23 Milton has suggested then that the extreme diversity of plant foods in tropical forests and the way in which they are distributed there in space and time has been a major selective force in the development of advanced cerebral complexity in certain higher primates .
24 It was suggested earlier that our image of the artefact is constantly dominated , not only by linguistic analogies , but also by the concept of art and the uniqueness of the object of art .
25 It was suggested earlier that the agencies set up during the nineteenth century to implement social policies were often ad hoc bodies .
26 It was suggested there that the fact that Fahreddin Acemi was seated in the place of honour , at the sultan 's right hand , indicated the pre-eminence of the Mufti at least in matters related to .
27 While we all deplore the sale of looted antiquities , it has been suggested recently that some ‘ source ’ nations , those rich in archaeological sites , might make more objects or recent archaeological finds available on loan to museums abroad .
28 It is suggested therefore that in the event of their failure such systems might be capable of a finer degree of control than has previously applied and that control facilities should be considered which permit the integrated use of all protective features .
29 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 .
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