Example sentences of "[noun] argue [conj] it [is] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Monetarists argue that it is relatively inelastic and stable , as in Figure 16.8(b) .
2 Drawing on an analysis of American inter-organizational relations Lindblom argues that it is simply not possible for the central state to impose its wishes on the local state .
3 While ACORN 's most obvious application is in market analysis , advertising and direct marketing , CACI argues that it is equally relevant to the sales manager for setting equitable targets for different sales territories .
4 Wittgenstein argued that it is not possible to spell out necessary and sufficient conditions for an activity to be a game .
5 The ISE is sceptical of these developments , although critics of the ISE argue that it is only interested in large companies and particularly in developing the international equity market at the expense of smaller domestic equities .
6 Those who believe that it is important to consider the structure of the market rather than the behaviour of firms argue that it is far better to deal with problems before they arise .
7 Some people argue that it is very difficult to write without making use of masculine pronouns or words with a masculine connotation when they are also referring to women .
8 Proponents of left-to-right strategy argue that it is much simpler , requiring far less bookkeeping , and thus leads to greater efficiency .
9 I have spent many hours of my life arguing that it is not necessary to have been in prison to write convincingly about prison conditions , not to be poor to declaim on the evils of poverty , nor black to describe racial discrimination .
10 Indeed , in proclaiming its independence , the Responsible Society argues that it is not affiliated to any political party , pressure group or religious body .
11 Basic needs theorists argue that it is more fruitful to stress results rather than inputs in order to measure the adequacy of development policy .
12 Therefore , even if complex real-world situations can only be represented by complex models , the proponents of the object-oriented model argue that it is only as it need be to represent these situations on computers and to manipulate those representations for the purpose of processing queries .
13 Winkler argues that it is not , meaning that the state must be concerned with flexibility , bargaining , negotiation and even the orchestration of private power .
14 Although the traditional approach is precisely this , Professor Preston argues that it is no longer adequate because of the effects of secularisation on Western society .
15 Mills argues that it is more complicated than this ; the power elite is a holy trinity of coincidences between apparently dissimilar organisation .
16 Porter argues that it is also important to distinguish between experience-curve ( learning-by-doing ) effects and reduction of costs through economies of scale , i.e. the reduction achievable in any one period by increasing efficiency through the use of larger production plants , thereby spreading infrastructure costs over more units of output .
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