Example sentences of "[adv] it is clear that " in BNC.
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1 | Although in all the three books considered there is some evolutionary scheme , when we take them together it is clear that Marx and Engels were very willing to modify the overall picture whenever they obtained new information . |
2 | So it is clear that Bukharin did not make the elementary mistake that Rosdolsky attributed to him . |
3 | So it is clear that private citizens are the proper persons to ‘ enforce ’ private law . |
4 | So it is clear that our first approach ( demonstrated in Fig. 2.20 ) had no general validity . |
5 | So it is clear that the financial statements of the firm , which are the only publicly available sources of financial information about the firm , are fraught with problems from beginning to end . |
6 | So it is clear that the two kinds of productivity — children and intellectual achievements — can be combined , as is borne out by the subsequent careers of the forty two students who matriculated in 1966 and who answered the questionnaire . |
7 | Our work so far has obviously only been of a preliminary nature , but even so it is clear that there are many strands in the concept of participation and public involvement in decision-making related to novel energy systems . |
8 | None the less it is clear that Marx felt that before he could complete a book on pre-capitalist societies , he had to find out much more about these societies and their transformations . |
9 | None the less it is clear that , whatever the theory , there was in practice no absolute bar to crossing the line between the kasabat kadiliks and the mevleviyets . |
10 | If we had included more papers in the sample the coverage might have appeared more dense , but nevertheless it is clear that it is a minority of unusual cases which get most press exposure . |
11 | The precise composition of the £0-£4 group can only be guessed at ; nevertheless it is clear that the gulf between the merchant class and the artisan population was a very wide one indeed . |
12 | Nevertheless it is clear that the chief gainer was Louis VII . |
13 | Nevertheless it is clear that statutory interference with the right is almost as old as the right itself . |
14 | Nevertheless it is clear that Anglo-American relations had suffered a number of shocks since 1950 , while Churchill was quite wrong in his expectation that the Americans would be happier to work with him than with Labour . |
15 | Thus it is clear that you need to work on the fast twitch muscles if you want to improve your speed . |
16 | Thus it is clear that our typical inhabitant is a peasant living in European Russia . |
17 | Thus it is clear that if the change is a realistic one and the company is justifiably convinced that it must be imposed , you will be extremely vulnerable if you do not fall in line . |
18 | Thus it is clear that to develop heavy industry one must increase the supply of products at all costs and by all means . |
19 | Thus it is clear that it is owing to her body that a woman is defective . ) |
20 | Thus it is clear that the ombudsman could , if his arguments are right , only investigate complaints arising from negligent valuations in the case of some lenders and some borrowers . |
21 | Thus it is clear that " true " or " false " neither add nor detract from what is actually asserted on a given occasion . |
22 | Thus it is clear that Castro had deliberately moved to implement socialist and pro-Communist policies before there was any question of Soviet involvement in Cuba and , indeed , before any decisive deterioration had taken place in US-Cuban relations ( see pages 66–9 ) . |
23 | Thus it is clear that ( a ) affirms the footballer ; ( b ) also affirms the footballer because the speaker has made it clear that it is a personal reaction of liking or disliking which has nothing to do with appreciation of football 's being a good game ; ( c ) is affirming also because although criticism of the game is stated , its positive value comes first , and in any case the keen footballer is likely to be the first to agree that the level of enjoyment varies according to different games of football ; ( d ) however veers towards dismissal of football and therefore dismissal of what is meaningful to the footballer , because although it acknowledges that sometimes it is a good game the emphasis is on the negative side ; ( e ) is not affirming because even though the hurt to the footballer is cushioned by making it clear that this is a personal opinion , a very negative judgement is in fact articulated ; ( f ) has the straight effect of dismissing the footballer as well as football because it implies that anyone who spends time on football is stupid . |
24 | To synthesise such band-pass response , notice that if an inductance of the prototype low-pass filter with unit cut-off pulsatance was then its reactance must become where Thus it is clear that an inductance of the low-pass prototype must be replaced by a series combination of an inductance and capacitance , the values of which are given by equations ( 12.45 ) and ( 12.46 ) . |
25 | Hence it is clear that , if records are randomized to individual storage positions or to small buckets , many records will become synonyms . |
26 | Hence it is clear that N-gram models are computationally practical for only small values of N. ( Jelinek 's system used a vocabulary of 1000 words and i=3 . ) |
27 | Now it is clear that by extending one-member-one-vote to the choice of constituency delegates , Labour can safely inject democracy into the party conference without fearing nasty side-effects . |
28 | Now it is clear that P6 and P7 are dual problems and therefore we can read off the optimal solution of P7 from P6/T1 , the optimal tableau of P6 . |
29 | Now it is clear that we do sometimes have alternative ways of determining guilt and innocence to our own satisfaction and it therefore makes sense to think of a fair trial as a trial designed to produce the correct verdict where correctness is assessable by some other objective standards , but in many cases this is not so and in practice the correct verdict is simply the one which is reached after a fair trial . |
30 | But it at once destroys such a reading : And now it is clear that as in other sonnets ( 20 , 36 , 39 ) , the Poet 's best or true ‘ self ’ is the Friend . |