Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] be [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The committee urged that the emphasis should henceforth be on the special needs for education of certain groups of children — those with learning difficulties — rather than on various categories of handicap . |
2 | But the new model should still be in the right price range for the Only Fools And Horses hero . |
3 | When active , they must always be on the alert , ready to take avoiding action . |
4 | Needles to be brought into holding position must always be at the opposite side to the carriage . |
5 | ‘ British Sugar often want to move a load at very short notice and we must always be at the ready ’ he adds . |
6 | It should always be with the opposite sex only ; yet novel reading girls exhaust their female magnetism without obtaining any compensating male magnetism , which of necessity deranges their entire sexual system . |
7 | One must add to this that the limitations to an experiment often lie in the performance of transducers , and the experimentalist should always be on the alert for new possibilities . |
8 | The weaving yarn should always be on the leading edge of the carriage . |
9 | The reading should always be for the -intrinsic interest or value of what is read … it should never be thought of as an exercise . " |
10 | He should probably be among the Top Sellers at the beginning of this article . |
11 | It should then be for the official aircraft accident investigating authority to establish the cause of the accident and to make recommendations for avoiding similar accidents in the future , and it should be for the civil courts to decide who is liable to pay damages and to whom . |
12 | Thornton should certainly be in the rugged bracket . |
13 | This means , for example , that some of the Russian Avant-garde might soon be on the international art market . |
14 | The anniversary of King George 's coronation , on 11 October , provided the occasion for great patriotic demonstrations , with at Newcastle , which might soon be in the front line , ‘ bonfires in several parts of the streets and beer given to the common people ’ . |
15 | You 'll really be for the high jump if you do n't put Farley 's Tea Timers on their menu . |
16 | It seems a bit on the pricy side , especially as no case is included , but it might well be worth the extra for the feel of the neck and the promise of high reliability . |
17 | However wrong the opinion expressed may be in point of truth , or however prejudiced the writer , it may still be within the prescribed limit . |
18 | He could justifiably be at the British Museum if asked . |
19 | Among the many shocks being delivered by the declining years of the twentieth century is that of discovering , after decades of thinking we were the true moderns , how modern they could already be at the other end of the century . |
20 | Armstrong could also be among the all-weather winners with the improving and well weighted Quattro in the Ascom Tele-Nova Handicap at Lingfield tomorrow . |
21 | Therefore instead of walking all the way along the cliffs that morning , he decided to go down to the beach on the last lap of his journey , knowing that Edna and her small charge could well be at the far end , from whence he could quickly scramble up the pathway to the Tremayne property . |
22 | The expansion you will face in 1993 could well be on the creative front , making this an ideal year to go into production or take on a major commitment . |
23 | Or they may simply be in the wrong place at the wrong time . |
24 | The traction — is referred to a set of coordinates which in classical elasticity are in the undeformed material , but in large-strain elasticity may alternatively be in the deformed material Consider at first the classical theory ; if the traction — acts on a surface with normal n then we write for the components of the traction , and the scalar product — . |
25 | But this would only be in the major things , Cassie . |
26 | An improper and dominant motive would have to be shown for revealing matters which would normally be in the public interest . |
27 | They would already be on the right side of the Border for shopping . |
28 | Landsbergis , meeting Gorbachev in Moscow at the latter 's request on June 26 , had been told that a moratorium would signal a return by Lithuania to its pre-March 11 status , and Landsbergis claimed that this meant that negotiations would formally be between the Soviet Union and one of its constituent republics . |
29 | The tariff-equivalent quota reduces welfare for two reasons : first , the government fails to capture the quota rents , though , even if it did so , welfare would still be below the pre-policy level by 4.15% ; second , this loss of 4.15% is caused by the quota changing firms ' behaviour . |
30 | Yet actually , the scheme would still work within their framework if , say , the manager received one tenth of unc — the incentives would still be in the right direction . |