Example sentences of "these [noun] it is " in BNC.

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1 Historians have found some manors where the local custom was for the widow to receive a half proportion , or even the whole , and yet in others apparently none — although in these cases it is more likely that the documentation is being misconstrued .
2 But in these cases it is necessary to know what was really going on at the time .
3 In these cases it is clear that the design developed by constant trial in practice .
4 Certain cases dominate the coverage in the national press , and by using these cases it is possible to indicate how the images of sex beast are constantly being preferred to readers .
5 In these cases it is more desirable to have the person or item carry the required information .
6 As a result of these cases it is clear that relatively small differences in the drafting of a rent review clause may have great practical consequences .
7 More commonly , however , one party to the original mortgage is to be released or another party added , and in these cases it is necessary for the mortgagee concerned to be a party to the document ( unless separate deeds of release and covenant are executed ) .
8 These are based on both the degree of digestion and on the proportions of teeth and bones affected , and using these patterns it is sometimes possible to identify predator species when they are unknown .
9 Without an appreciation of these norms it is almost impossible to make sense , let alone describe , much of the conduct which characterises our mutual involvements .
10 Prior to these investigations it is necessary to clear the bowel completely of faeces .
11 In reconciling the needs of these groups it is sensible to separate appraisal for the purpose of judging performance from that of dealing with pay and promotion .
12 Where enamel remains on these teeth it is restricted to small islands separated by areas of dentine .
13 For these reasons it is necessary for you to check catalogues carefully to make sure the trees you order are compatible , or you could grow self-fertile varieties that do not need cross-pollination .
14 For these reasons it is often difficult in many cases to trace a single primary source .
15 For these reasons it is worth considering carefully the kinds of approach to assessment that are currently available , and examining ways of improving these .
16 For these reasons it is difficult to generate principles of interviewing , there are always alternative viewpoints and exceptions .
17 For these reasons it is the delightful little Concerto which comes over with the greatest conviction though the recording acoustic is far too resonant for the essentially intimate character of the writing ; and the sound in general affords too much prominence to the continuo which booms away in a far from discreet manner .
18 For these reasons it is difficult to get into .
19 For these reasons it is also unlikely to bring about genuine professional development and change .
20 For these reasons it is the imaging procedure of choice .
21 For these reasons it is no exaggeration to claim that the increasing drift to training at the expense of education , in adult education as elsewhere , represents a very real threat to a democratic society .
22 For these reasons it is suggested that in tackling the problem , good monitoring arrangements should be coupled with an early involvement of school and parents .
23 For these reasons it is seldom used for current measurement nowadays but it does find application in a modified form of operation that enables electrical power to be measured in both direct and alternating-current circuits at frequencies up to a few hundred hertz .
24 In looking at the size of endowments for these houses it is important to recognize the wider benefits that are secured .
25 In these times it is important to follow things through .
26 Many products contain mechanisms that are interfaced to electronics and with the advances in miniaturization of these products it is only the special-purpose machines which possess the skills to manufacture and assemble them .
27 On listening to these performances it is easy to understand why .
28 In the light of these considerations it is perhaps not surprising that new social divisions and conflicts have arisen in the English village in recent years , nor that the local population has preferred to turn in upon itself in the face of these changes .
29 Nevertheless , in the light of these considerations it is hard to escape the impression that , like the Venus of Willendorf , or the many-breasted Diana of Ephesus , the modern welfare state has become the re-embodiment of the primal mother , the abstract , secular , bureaucratic equivalent of the mother-as-breast .
30 Outside these harbours it is doubtful if the total winter population exceeds 200 birds , but up to 70 winter at Newhaven and between Rye and the Midrips .
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