Example sentences of "no [noun sg] that [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | It 's no accident that loss of occupation and collapse of relationships , even marriages , often go hand in hand . |
2 | According to the preliminary results published in The Lancet , the three-year trial , organized jointly by Britain 's Medical Research Council and the French National AIDS Research Agency , has shown no evidence that treatment with AZT delays the onset of AIDS in patients known to be carrying the HIV virus . |
3 | Yet there is no evidence that jade from this source was reaching China before the eighteenth century . |
4 | He also said there was no evidence that involvement by the companies with the independent generators had led to any increase in prices for electricity consumers . |
5 | To make matters worse , there is no evidence that lack of spending by social services is compensated for by increased NHS spending , or vice versa ; indeed , the financial allocation seems just as likely to be low from both authorities , as it has been , for example , in the London Borough of Lambeth , or very good in both authorities , as traditionally has been the case in Newcastle . |
6 | From the 1840s to 1900 the proportion of illegitimate births declined throughout Europe , from 7 per cent to less than 4 per cent , with no evidence that chastity outside marriage had become more popular . |
7 | We have heard no suggestion that recourse to Parliamentary history has significantly increased the cost of litigation in Australia or New Zealand and I do not believe that it will do so in this country . |
8 | Mr Bell said there was no suggestion that food in the premises was in an unfit condition . |
9 | There is no doubt that competition from cheaper European pork helped depress the UK pig market . |
10 | There is no doubt that competition from both within and outside the profession will continue to grow , and efficient practice management in all its forms has become as important as technical skill in maintaining and improving profitability . |
11 | There is no doubt that part of the Catholic community in Britain reacted strongly to the destruction and damage of Catholic churches . |
12 | There is no doubt that part of the leadership role of a manager is to secure this harmony in his own section . |
13 | There 's no doubt that exaggeration of symptoms can become a powerful factor in pursuing compensation claims , and if bogus claims do create an RSI bandwagon , genuine cases will fail as a result . |
14 | ‘ We have no doubt that intensification of use can be a material change of use , whether it is or not depends upon the degree of intensification . |
15 | However , there seems no doubt that slavery as a mode of exploitation was on the decline in Latin America , even before it was abolished , and that the economic case against this form of labour appeared increasingly strong after 1850 . |
16 | There is no doubt that sale of goods is the principal method by which legal ownership in goods can be transferred for value . |
17 | I have no doubt that obliteration of closed railways in some parts of the south of England has gone much further . |
18 | There is no doubt that investment in the companies which have gone private has increased , sometimes substantially . |
19 | Colleagues stopped talking to me , afraid no doubt that being on the wrong side of the new Director might prove contagious . |
20 | The foregoing submissions do not by any means exhaust the sources of evidence that leave no doubt that belief in a ‘ god ’ in some form , and a corresponding religion , is absolutely necessary to mankind . |
21 | While this is seen within Total Communication programmes in education , there is no doubt that acceptance of BSL , ASL and so on offers the greatest hope for the development of effective education for deaf children . |
22 | There is no doubt that reform of the common agricultural policy must be carried out in a way which ensures that there is no discrimination against farmers in the United Kingdom . |
23 | There is no doubt that officialdom in Brussels turns a blind eye to anti-competitive behaviour by state-owned industries in a way that it is not prepared to do for private companies . |
24 | Indeed , there is no doubt that control of French mainland ports was vitally important to the English , and that much diplomacy in the course of the war was concerned with securing and maintaining access to the use of their facilities . |