Example sentences of "[pron] the [noun] [modal v] be [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We shall endeavour to maintain prices shown but we reserve the right to increase any price shown at any time without limitation , in which case you will be advised of the revised price at the time of booking : after which the price will be in accordance with our price policy , shown in the Cosmos Consumer Protection Plan on pages 12/13 of this brochure .
2 In order to achieve the first objective the drafter will seek to define his/her client 's obligations , restrict the circumstances in which the client will be in breach of contract , and restrict , limit or even exclude liabilities which would otherwise otherwise .
3 8.1 To pay observe and perform During the Term the Tenant shall punctually pay the rents and observe and perform the covenants and other terms of this Lease and if at any time during the Term the Tenant shall make any default in payment of the rents or in observing or performing any of the covenants or other terms of this Lease the Guarantor will pay the rents and observe or perform the covenants or terms in respect of which the Tenant shall be in default and make good to the Landlord on demand and indemnify the Landlord against all losses damages costs and expenses arising or incurred by the Landlord as a result of such non-payment non-performance or non-observance notwithstanding :
4 Some Ministers told him the switch should be to income tax ; others , including Kenneth Baker , the home secretary , suggested VAT .
5 I can not envisage what the circumstances will be in 20 years ' time .
6 While our minds may boggle at the difficulties which exist now , goodness knows what the scene will be after 1993 .
7 Unless its practices are to arise totally spontaneously out of the ‘ innate ’ qualities of the new media , it is hard to see how this is to occur or what the music will be like .
8 Tonight we find out what the effects would be of a seventeen and a half per cent tax on books and newspapers .
9 Naturally , when the seedlings are planted out , you will be all agog to see what the blooms will be like .
10 God knows what the North must be like , you feel , if Wolverton is like this !
11 To decide what the company should be like in five years time may not solve a crisis that is looming up next month .
12 This may be done on the machine if it is available , or on a simulator or on some kind of mock-up of what the system will be like .
13 In Jones v Jones ( see 13.11 ) the court considered what the fate should be of a valuation " made on an erroneous principle " .
14 I went along to see Ray Talbot , of Norfolk-based The Real McKoi , to see what the trends might be for the coming pond season .
15 I inquired of my officials — those officials who are supposed to have such total control over everything I do what the experience would be of the new scheme during the current financial year .
16 What the repercussions will be in South Africa — where the ageing president , Danie Craven , has threatened to support rebel tours — only time will tell .
17 If the water is very low when you are constructing your map it is worth trying to imagine what the water will be like during a winter flood .
18 It is impossible to say how many until we know what the winter will be like .
19 Mullineux does not make it clear , however , what the advantages would be of dismantling the Bank of England and the major functions being carried out by the private sector , indeed it is difficult to see of any real benefits , although the disadvantages could be major .
20 The Focus Activity asks you to choose an alternative way of delivering care ; to describe how this could be implemented in your situation ; and what the consequences might be for individual clients , costs and staffing .
21 So while we may now know something about who is more likely to abuse and who is more likely to be a victim , we do not know why , when , how often and with what degree of certainty , abuse will take place , nor what the consequences will be for the child .
22 I , however was lost in a daydream wondering what the Queen would be like .
23 I would n't even know what the purpose would be for doing it , really .
24 Indeed , I am not sure what the correlation would be between formal attainments and the right qualities needed to take a degree in poetry .
25 HAVING TRAVELLED over 150 miles each way to see Nirvana at the London Astoria last Wednesday , I was interested to see what the event would be like regarding ‘ crusties ’ , T-shirt prices and security at the ‘ notorious ’ Astoria .
26 HAVING TRAVELLED over 150 miles each way to see Nirvana at the London Astoria last Wednesday , I was interested to see what the event would be like regarding ‘ crusties ’ , T-shirt prices and security at the ‘ notorious ’ Astoria .
27 You 'd be on the line for a certain amount of publicity , but I 've been looking at today 's papers and it seems you 've already had a taste of what the Press can be like … ’
28 When I read a book or saw a play or studied a synopsis , there came into my mental vision a fairly detailed and consecutive pattern of what the film would be like .
29 always look beyond the needs of the individual child to see what the implications may be for the learning needs of other children in the class ;
30 I shall then draw on my own experience to explore which of these two approaches seems to offer the best way forward , and consider what the implications might be for any future evaluation .
  Next page