Example sentences of "[vb infin] [vb mod] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | The intention of the partners will be clearer , and some of the difficulties that can otherwise arise may thus be avoided . |
2 | Also , the insurers will not necessarily cover all your customers and those that they do cover may only be covered up to a certain amount . |
3 | If I let life on this planet die out and send the slug into space , then , since it will exist for ever , the quantity of pleasure it will enjoy will eventually outweigh all the pleasures enjoyed on this earth for ten thousand years . |
4 | 15 Army Group had given instructions [ KP 153 ] to Eighth Army on 7 May that surrender can only be accepted of those forces in contact with Eighth Army . |
5 | Well , let's just do let's just do two more and see if the As can can catch up and then we 'll carry it on I have n't finished yet , we 'll carry the game on and remember the score . |
6 | Any organisation that wants to survive and succeed must constantly question itself about how it operates , whether it has the right balance of products/skills and — most important of all — whether it is actually providing what its customers want . |
7 | ‘ My dear girl , nothing I could do could possibly undermine your authority , ’ he drawled lazily . |
8 | Even if the buyer were able to do that , the greatest reduction the buyer could achieve would still leave the seller entitled to nominal damages . |
9 | The overcrowding that could result would inevitably escalate the conflict . |
10 | The move has been welcomed by Datarange , which says that the financial stability which its new parent will bring will better enable it to pursue its business strategy . |
11 | With his broad , beaming face , an eternal smile which you 'd think could never contain an ounce of malice , his burly body , Italian charm and American friendliness , he was what Americans call a ‘ natural ’ . |
12 | Take Birmingham City , who you might think could hardly afford to alienate more of their fans . |
13 | The secret language , the underground stream that forced through her like a river , that rose and danced inside her like the pulling jet of a fountain , that wetted her face and hands like fine spray , that joined her back to what she had lost , to something she had once intimately known , that she could hardly believe would always be there as it was now , which waited for her and called her by her name . |
14 | The need of schizophrenic patients to sometimes withdraw would then be explicable as a protective response from further stimulation . |
15 | I beg that those who are responsible for making it work will now take full advantage of the opportunities . |
16 | The mutual support and warmth that membership of a Christian group could provide will also have played its part . |
17 | Homogenisation — the forces keeping the genes in a family similar to each other — is more subtle ; but the way in which this can occur can now be explained by a variety of molecular mechanisms which ensure , willy-nilly , that one variant copy would replace all other copies . |
18 | What one newspaper will not print another paper may be very happy to publish ; what one state radio may silence may well be carried by another . |
19 | Ken commented earlier that er er prior to the Financial Services Act coming into force which I think was some time in nineteen eighty-eight , the er D T I was responsible and there come back to the D T I if these sort of things had applied and er compensation effectively by the D T I for mal-administration or whatever so that er say we do n't pretend to be pension experts , so any retrospection that I would suggest might well be appropriate as at the date of the Financial Services Act becoming into force . |
20 | Domestic servants often remained unmarried , or if they did marry could sometimes carry on working , so their age structure more closely resembles that of male professions ( see Table 5b ) . |
21 | Now if we are able to work out what happens , then of course we can relay that information to the major relief agencies , whom we would hope could then step in and provide food before the famine occurs . |
22 | But you would never guess would really ! |
23 | Making quality separate would merely make quality control ineffective and of no practical consequence . |
24 | His full support for the anti-Saddam coalition has not been universally popular : hence his latest diplomatic effort , which he must hope will still redound to his credit and give the Soviet Union a useful base on which to build a role in the post-war Middle East . |
25 | When invaders appear , the first troops they will meet will almost certainly be from the provincial army . |
26 | And that 's my Italian name for the time being , let's now hear let's now see how Colin will do with er the Pisa players down at Lane , Colin it 's all yours . |
27 | Erm as I digest Mr 's comments and the various implications erm of the things that he said , it 's more and more confirming for me that perhaps we may well be right in the step by step measured approach because quite clearly erm I suspect that if we run at this stage a preferred location , erm I suspect that the the opposition to that and there would be opposition to it , may well have may well prejudice the principle er of the new settlement . |
28 | How and when management will respond must also be defined . |
29 | This could happen should genetically altered plants become weeds , or should insects designed to eat certain pests develop a taste for others . |
30 | would would also be wise for any new settlement which you chief specify , that any new settlement you may recommend should also include some provision for expansion land , and my point I think is that you could not divide a settlement as big as five thousand , I think it would be reasonable to say a new settlement make with a an eventual capacity of say three and a half thousand , that might be appropriate around Greater York . |