Example sentences of "[is] [prep] be consider " in BNC.

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1 So , if our tiny survey is to be considered representative ( and I suspect that it is ) , then ‘ Meat Is Murder ’ is generally seen as an honest statement but not one which will cause a drastic change of thinking ( or eating ) patterns .
2 Firstly there is the union meeting at which Gomez 's nomination for a permanent rather than a temporary position as a chargehand in the factory is to be considered .
3 In the context of unfair dismissal it is not your personal situation that is to be considered , but that of an employee in your category .
4 All was well until at a meeting on 16 August 1889 at Euston , when the directors heard ‘ that a meeting is to be held tomorrow , Saturday the 17 inst. , in the Schools at Stantonbury when the question of recommending a school Board for the Parish of Bradwell in lieu of the present voluntary arrangement is to be considered . ’
5 A separate venue must be available , however , if confidential information is to be considered in relation to nursing care .
6 Therefore , if the acceptance of the Created God is to be considered , and as the doctrine has already produced the original unit of goodness defined in evolutionary terms , and further , as some form of assessment may ultimately be wanted , there is a case for its acceptance .
7 If a new test of obscenity is to be considered , then it must catch works which endanger not governments , but society itself .
8 Lascube has served his suspension , as did Moscato , but the latter will have to show that his discipline has improved before he is to be considered for selection again .
9 Whether this ebullient novel of 1923 is to be considered as a parody or just as a light-hearted analogue of The Prisoner of Zenda , the resemblances are too close to be mere coincidence .
10 This conflict abuse , as will be made clear later , is to be considered not only with a view to regulation by formal law but also by the regulatory technique known as the ‘ Chinese Wall ’ .
11 This approach argues that the best way in which to use syntactic knowledge is to formalise the grammar and encode it as a set of rules to which input must conform if it is to be considered acceptable .
12 But such a move does nothing for women , or for the concept of the feminine per se : it expands our understanding of what is to be considered authentically male .
13 In order to change the understanding of women , or enlarge the conception as to what is to be considered authentically female , we should have to apply what have been thought to be characteristically male attributes to a female symbol .
14 Indeed one might well say that , through this augmentation of what is to be considered male , the male now absorbs all in himself .
15 Talk of the Spirit as female may moreover once again tend to fuel a certain understanding of what is to be considered feminine .
16 The basis was no longer to be the palace scaled down , but the cottage extended : ‘ In this view of a villa , the dwelling is to be considered as only an amplification of the cottage . ’
17 Another problem , and one that was intimated in the previous paragraph , is the question of who is to be considered accountable to whom .
18 The matrix in which this application is to be considered has three components .
19 ‘ The removal or the retention of a child is to be considered wrongful where — ( a ) it is in breach of rights of custody attributed to a person , an institution or any other body , either jointly or alone , under the law of the state in which the child was habitually resident immediately before the removal or retention ; and ( b ) at the time of removal or retention those rights were actually exercised , either jointly or alone , or would have been so exercised but for the removal or retention .
20 Where the right has been enjoyed for 40 years , it is to be considered ’ absolute and indefeasible ’ .
21 There are , to my mind , a number of specific functions that a TechDoc system must provide if it is to be considered a member of the fraternity .
22 10. ( 1 ) An application to a licensing board of any kind mentioned in subsection ( 6 ) below in respect of any premises shall be in such form as may be prescribed , shall be completed and signed by the applicant or his agent , and shall be lodged with the clerk of the licensing within whose area the premises are situated not later than five weeks before the first day of the meeting of the board at which the application is to be considered .
23 ( 4 ) An applicant shall not be treated as having failed to comply with subsection ( 2 ) ( b ) above if the notice is , without any fault or intention of his , removed , obscured or defaced before the first day of the meeting of the board at which the application is to be considered , so long as he has taken reasonable steps for its protection and , if need be , replacement .
24 ( 5 ) In the case of an application for the grant or provisional grant of a new licence , the applicant shall , not later than three weeks before the first day of the meeting of the board at which the application is to be considered , give notice in writing of the application to every occupier of premises situated in the same building as the premises to which the application relates .
25 ( 7 ) On receipt of an application of a kind referred to in subsection ( 6 ) above , and until the first day of the meeting of the board at which the application is to be considered , the clerk of a licensing board shall make the application , together with the documents lodged therewith , available for inspection by members of the public during normal office hours .
26 The clerk is required to make the application available for inspection during normal office hours by members of the public from the date of lodging until the first day of the meeting at which it is to be considered ( subs .
27 ( 2 ) In relation to each application for a new licence , the list mentioned in subsection ( 1 ) above shall specify the name , designation and address of the applicant ; in the case of an application to which section 11 of this Act applies , the names , designations and addresses of both persons named in the application ; the address of the premises in respect of which the licence in desired ; the type of licence for which application is made ; the first day of the meeting of the licensing board at which the application is to be considered .
28 ( 3 ) In relation to each application for the regular extension of permitted hours , the list mentioned in subsection ( 1 ) above shall specify ( a ) the name , designation and address of the applicant ; ( b ) the address of the premises in respect of which the application is made and the type of licence held in respect of those premises ; the nature of the extension of hours for which application is made ; the first day of the meeting of the licensing board at which the application is to be considered .
29 ( 1 ) A licensing board may decline to consider an application if the applicant or his representative does not attend the meeting at which the application is to be considered :
30 Provided that the board may refuse such an application if the applicant , having been cited by the board to attend the meeting at which his application is to be considered , fails to attend such a meeting .
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