It is plain that here the foundation is laid for the establishment of a monopoly.
It is plain that in the vast majority of cases where two roads intersect, and in many cases where three or four come together, the lines meet perhaps at right angles and diverge to entirely different localities.
It must be plain that, as a general rule, it is unfitting that government should own and operate industrial establishments.
In the first place, it is plain that no more than a century ago the world had comparatively very little need for railways.
At the present day it is plain that a revolution, neither slow nor silent, is taking place in the political parties of America.
It is plain that business, the press, and politics all tend to promote a great activity of body and mind.
These considerations make it plain that only by the most careful supervision by intelligent men who understand the nature of infectious diseases and their causes in a general way can these be kept away.
It is soplain that we have only to say, "How readest thou?
This is so plain that a child may see it; and yet, strange to say, many of the Lord's beloved people seem to be clouded on the subject.
All this is so plain thatwe need only say, "How readest thou?
The judgment is so plain that there is not a shadow of ground for a question; all dissension is absolutely closed; and if any murmur is raised, the murmurer is at once silenced by "Friend, I do thee no wrong.
It is plain that, after this, a fortitude replaced the despondency stamping him.
But the teetotaler chief merrily replied: "Some uncharitable persons say that old Bourbon valor inspires our generals in the field, but it is plain that Dutch courage was not needed on board of the Monitor!
This indeed is not all that is meant by self-denial; but before proceeding with the subject, I would ask whether the generality of mankind go as far as this: it is plain that they do not.
Next, it is plain that mathematical developments, that is, the system of truths drawn out from mathematical definitions or equations, do not fall under our present subject, though altogether analogous to it.
Again, it is plain that a man's after course for good or bad brings out the passing words or obscure actions of previous years.
It is plain that if the measure is of such a character that no great harm can result from the possible error involved in the process of calculation, it can be adopted with less hesitation than if the opposite were the case.
It is plain that if that idea is to be rejected, the policy of wage settlement as a whole must give some other guarantee of distributive justice to the wage earners.
It is plain that, if any other principle were also to be adopted, under which wages in particular industries were adjusted by reference to the profits return in these industries, that scheme of relationship would be constantly disturbed.
It is plain thatif the suggested method is used to define a just level of profits, differences of opinion will manifest themselves in the process.
But it is plain that, since the beast was apparently coming in the morning, in broad daylight, instead of at night, it seemed to have changed its tactics, and no one could tell what it intended to do.
But the two qualities are closely related; and the saga-man makes it plain that, by means of the drink, Hott has acquired both.
The dramatists who gathered round Lope as their leader regarded Cervantes as their common enemy, and it is plain that he was equally obnoxious to the other clique, the culto poets who had Gongora for their chief.
At any rate it is plain that in its construction Jervas's translation was very freely drawn upon, and very little or probably no heed given to the original Spanish.
It is plain that he had at one time an intention of dealing with the pastoral romances as he had dealt with the books of chivalry, and but for Avellaneda he would have tried to carry it out.
Do you speak to him, for it is plain that he has sense enough, and bid him say naught but that he and his mother have escaped from the town, and, if you will, that he escaped in the sack.
It is plain that I am like my father, and therefore it is safe for me to go.
It is plain that we are to be taken," my father said on that, "so we will wait no longer.
Well now, father, make it so plain that I can get hold of it.
I there resolved never to forget that charge he made me, in his extremity: "Make it so plain that I can get hold of it.
It is plain that this is a quality which as much as, if not more than, any other multiplies good results in practical life.
And it is plain that a government by popular discussion tends to produce this quality.
And the conclusion is plain that if there had been more such people, if the world had not laughed at those there were, if rather it had encouraged them there would have been a great accumulation of proved science ages before there was.
But it is plain that in this final account, as it lies between us and our Master, He alone can decide how the past and the present will stand together who is our Creator and our Judge.
For this operation it is necessary to screw up the rolls tightly, and it will be plain that, whenever the rolls are vacant of rubber, there is a tendency for them to grind upon each other, thus setting free fine particles of iron and graphite.
Under present circumstances it is plain that if paleness is demanded it has to be supplied.
As the night-air in Malaya is usually heavily laden with moisture, it will be plain that such a policy was a topsy-turvy one.
Granted that most of the dreaded diseases travel beneath the surface of the ground by means of buried timber, it is plain that as far as stumps are concerned, the chief source of danger lies in the existence of the roots.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "plain that" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.