Example sentences of "be [that] [pron] [is] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 For example , in the educational dimension , the aims for a child aged 3–4 are that s/he is provided with opportunities for intellectual growth and pre-school learning and is well-prepared for starting school .
2 Counterfeiting is a multi million pound industry and all the signs are that it 's growing at an alarming rate .
3 And are you confident when you give a weather forecast that the chances are that it 's going to be correct , or do you do it with a slight feeling of uneasiness ?
4 ‘ All signs are that it is making a real impact in reducing the spread of Aids , ’ Mr Roberts said .
5 ‘ Industrial drug research is facing a crisis ’ was the headline of a British Medical Journal editorial recently ; and all the indications in Cured to Death are that it is going to get worse .
6 So riddled with complexities has this question proved to be that one is tempted to follow the example of the legendary definition of folk song — ‘ all songs are folk songs ; I never heard horses sing 'em ’ — and suggest that all music is popular music : popular with someone .
7 The immediate answer might well be that one is making a financial profit and the other a loss .
8 There are two solutions — either one refuses to conduct policy-oriented research in order to preserve one 's academic purity or one undertakes the research and risks the consequences which may be that one is over-identified with those who commissioned the research or those investigated .
9 Well I just feel no matter sentence he serves he 's always going to be that he 's left my daughter with a life sentence .
10 Kinnock 's weakness , he riposted thoughtfully , may be that he is becoming too autocratic .
11 The main criterion for an effective service must be that it is staffed by experienced professionals who are appropriately qualified .
12 It is too often assumed that if a law is not designed to protect one man from another its only rationale can be that it is designed to punish moral wickedness , or in Lord Devlin 's words ‘ to enforce a moral principle ’ .
13 because the obviously danger 's that it 's snapping the dowels and it 's which , it what happened on , on the case of the two dowels in n it ?
14 So one is forced to conclude that the reason hundreds of dismayed tourists and walkers are stranded on stations up and down the length of the West Highland line at the height of the season , unable to squeeze into an already packed ‘ Sprinter ’ , if it arrives at all , is that somebody is doing this on purpose .
15 One consequence of this immobility is that everyone is surrounded by people very like himself , most of whom he has always known .
16 My complaint about reviews so far is that everyone is reviewing the man Larkin and not the biography of him .
17 What must be remembered though is that whatever is asked and answered in a survey has to be inputted in some way and once it has been processed the output has to be read by someone .
18 and the best thing is that nobody 's doing it , everybody 's doing cabaret spots along the line jokes and stuff like that , but nobody 's not doing cabaret spots with trumpets
19 Part of the problem that we got back to when we looked over the issues is that what 's happening in the private sector is not just that it 's growing but that it 's very much in an unplanned fashion .
20 The general maxim of the law is that what is annexed to the land becomes part of the land .
21 The trouble is that what is measured differs from medium to medium , and , therefore , cost measurements differ almost completely between , say , TV and posters in what they are costs of .
22 The point at issue is that what is happening is not only a tragedy of today but a portent of tomorrow .
23 The rationalization is that everything is done in the interests of the patient , but it is also designed to protect professionals from feelings that are , for them , genuinely intolerable .
24 The main thing is that everything is going to be all right ! ’
25 Its particular advantage is that everything is contained into a smaller central area .
26 The significance of fantasizing about a new house or a new flat is that one is visualizing a change in one 's work environment .
27 ‘ You see , one of the advantages of being dead is that one is released as it were from the bonds of time and therefore I can see everything that has happened or will happen , all at the same time except that of course I now know that Time does not , for all practical purposes , exist . ’
28 Another difference between the characterization of Alison and that of the three men is that she is seen totally from the outside — one sees her appearance in her face and her clothes ; we see what actions she does .
29 Chrissie is relatively young and inexperienced , and while she may be a hardened liar and criminal , we feel the balance of the probabilities is that she is telling the truth .
30 The gossip is that she is thinking of resigning from the practice and going back to her home town .
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