Example sentences of "it [vb -s] that [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 It says that based on the cost reduction it has achieved in transferring 75% of assembly and test to Bangkok , Thailand , it would transfer the rest of its production to Bangkok over the next six months , enabling further cost reductions and facility consolidations at its San Jose site .
2 It appends that promise to a clear and comprehensive code of conduct ( one that builds helpfully on the recently published Fleet Street set of principles ) .
3 It appends that promise to a clear and comprehensive code of conduct ( one that builds helpfully on the recently published Fleet Street set of principles ) .
4 Even the Symbolist view ( which held sway in Russia in the first years of the century ) that ‘ art is thinking in images ’ can not be admitted , because although it acknowledges that thought in art takes a different form from conventional philosophy , it will in the end lead the study of art beyond art itself to forms of knowing and feeling , to epistemology and psychology .
5 In so far as the United Kingdom might wish to argue that it itself has the right under the Convention to retain requirements such as those at issue , reference can also be made to the court 's judgment in Commission of the European Economic Community v. Italian Republic ( Case 10/61 ) [ 1962 ] E.C.R. 1 , from which it appears that according to the principles of international law , a member state which , by virtue of the entry into force of the E.E.C .
6 It appears that starting in 1979 , the Intelligence and Security Group ( G ) , an Army Intelligence Corps unit based at Rheindalen , West Germany , had recruited five informants within the Irish community .
7 Yet it seems that according to Lord Diplock such reasoning is merely the invention of a fancied ambiguity , which is no reason for denying the ‘ plain ’ meaning of a statute .
8 Despite the lack of statistical significance it seems that contact with food provided the most potent stimulus to inducing motor activity .
9 It seems that work on the use of relevance feedback can not help but include an element of research in the design of adaptive systems .
10 It finds that according to the dictionary definitions there is a link between ’ ate ’ and ’ fork ’ in that they both have the phrase ’ taking up ’ in common .
11 One of the most obvious implications of this definition is that if there is no obligation , there is no liability : it follows that costs to be incurred in the future are not liabilities while the entity retains the discretion to avoid them .
12 It means that quarks inside a hadron behave almost like free particles in high-energy collisions , so that their perturbations can be treated successfully by perturbation theory .
13 It means that claims for compensation can live on after asbestos sufferers die and brings the law in Scotland into line with that in England .
14 The paper was prompted by the Law Society 's concern over the increasing cost of defaults — it estimates that claims against its compensation fund will reach £20m annually , mainly attributed to defaults of sole practitioners ( defaults within partnerships usually fall on the solicitors ' indemnity fund ) .
15 Once it realizes that going to the vet is not always an unpleasant experience , then its fear of this situation should be significantly reduced , and subsequently it should be easier for the dog to be examined without difficulty .
16 It suggests that translating between languages with different priorities and different types of syntactic restrictions necessarily involves a great deal of skewing of patterns of information flow .
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