Example sentences of "it is [that] he " in BNC.

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1 The more firmly he tells them and the country that , as Prime Minister , he and not they will rule , the more likely it is that he will eventually reach Downing Street .
2 You will understand how important it is that he does , ’ The message was that if there was no agreement at Chicago , Congress might not be in a mood to furnish further British Lend-Lease requirements .
3 Even though the new series looks good ( with one of its highlights promising to be the small-screen debut of Paul Whitehead ) and he has at least three other projects on the go , Harry Enfield still has n't figured out what it is that he does exactly .
4 If there has been a criticism , it is that he often lured artists into singing roles beyond their immediate range or capacity .
5 But I have often asked myself what it is that drew me to Sibelius 's music and I think it is that he is a composer who can not really be compared to anyone else .
6 The long and the short of it is that he came in to replace Andy …
7 Anyway , the upshot of it is that he 's written a song , for his daughter , based on the Basil Brush thing .
8 It provides a healthy challenge to the virility of a believer 's conviction to see if he can say succinctly just why it is that he believes Christianity is true .
9 His reference to faith may explain how it is that he is able to conceive of the notion of absolute Truth which he calls God .
10 It is that he is criminally insane — unable to stop himself from sexually abusing women he has lured with his position or his charm , and sometimes overpowered with drugs .
11 It is not perfectly clear from what Mace says what it is that he wants to contrast with my body as it appears to others .
12 The more partners a man has had , the more likely it is that he will entertain fantasies about people with whom he has not yet had a sexual relationship .
13 I 'm just asking Professor for my own clarification at this stage , and it is that he does not agree to accept Mr 's addendum .
14 The speaker must monitor what it is that he has just said , and determine whether it matches his intentions , while he is uttering his current phrase and monitoring that , and simultaneously planning his next utterance and fitting that into the overall pattern of what he wants to say and monitoring , moreover , not only his own performance but its reception by his hearer .
15 The longer a person ( here defined as the head of the household ) is unemployed , the more likely it is that he or she will belong to the general labourer or other occupational groups .
16 Another difficulty with the idea of the novel as an intentional act of communication is that until the writer has completed it he does n't know what it is that he is communicating , and perhaps does n't know even then .
17 What is striking about it is that he is the first Anglo-Saxon king known to have abdicated to go to Rome and that he went to Rome not as a baptized Christian but to seek baptism .
18 is to discuss wi with the client what it is that he
19 In the end , of course , what is to count as data is whatever materials are grist to the researcher 's mill ; whatever it is that he or she wants to work with .
20 ‘ One of the odd things about it is that he was wearing brand-new clothes , ’ he added .
21 The more varied or diversified the business of the client , and the larger the amount of insurance to be placed , the more likely it is that he will look around the market for himself in order to obtain the best terms .
22 And the upshot of it is that he has taken the custody of the de Breos lands from the Earl of Cornwall , and bestowed it upon his beloved justiciar .
23 The position was that the plaintiffs effectively retained possession of the surgery premises and the defendant er moved out of the premises and er went and found other surgery premises and er the position as I understand it is that he is carrying on his own practice today from other premises , the plaintiffs are such as now surviving , are still continue to practice from the former part of the premises .
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