Example sentences of "what must [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But what must finally be regarded as its most revolutionary feature is the importance that it attributes to language : not only is language a major preoccupation of structuralist thinking , but language itself is used as a model for all sorts of non-linguistic institutions .
2 The first volume of what must eventually be one of the great modern biographies , John Richardson 's book was published last year and has now appeared in paperback .
3 In what must clearly be seen as an empire-building move , with particular reference to Christie 's ambitions in the Far East , Christie 's International plc have acquired Spink and Son Ltd , the adjacent fine art dealers and auctioneers , for £7.1 million ( $10.65 million ) .
4 What must ultimately be recognised is a more profound change that has overcome the cultural sphere , namely the broad and far-reaching symptoms of the ‘ postmodern ’ in culture .
5 It has long been recognized that Pausanias gave a Herodotean dress and added some comments of his own to what must ultimately be a third-century B.C. account of the Celtic attack ( O. Regenbogen , P.-W. , s.v .
6 Another chapter , on the Kapos and the Special Squads , exhibits what must surely be judged an analytic understanding of the concentration-camp system set up by the Nazis — an understanding Eberstadt is inclined to deny him , believing that the camps are insufficiently construed in the Auschwitz book as an institutionalised anti-Semitism peculiar to Germany and politically-determined : she thinks it is soft of him to see them as belonging to a universal latent hostility to strangers .
7 Nonetheless , that inspired teacher Bernard of Clairvaux , who later on founded the Cistercian Order , knew well the innermost hearts of the army when he preached a sermon containing what must surely be the earliest ever advertising campaign .
8 In the durables category , the Electricity Association 's Creature Comforts campaign carried off what must surely be its last award .
9 He should be at home in his father 's mansion , not listening to the ranting of some deranged maniac on the eve of what must surely be the one of the largest battles in the Empire 's history .
10 We pursued a whole range of initiatives and research and enlisted the help of other agencies and professionals who became our allies and were able to reveal what must surely be one of the biggest scandals of our time .
11 The firmness of the houses has not changed ; a few may have become offices , or been sub-divided into what must surely be splendid apartments , but the depth of the society persists .
12 Patriotism and religion combined in what must surely be one of the most emotional reactions of the Greeks to the impact of an alien society .
13 There was nothing she could do to stop what must surely now be inevitable , and part of her gloried in the surrender .
14 Latest news is that development will not stop here , either , since WordStar has acquired Zsoft , and intends to incorporate much of that company 's technology into what must surely become its flagship product once more .
15 The affair is the noisiest clash ( so far ) in what must surely be the longest-running takeover battle in business history .
16 During that time it has had numerous facelifts , and in what must surely be the last of its nine lives , the Big Cat has had another .
17 In June of that year Eliot met a figure from what must now have seemed to the London banker a remote part of his life .
18 ‘ While the Labour Party must be free to reach its own conclusions , we should listen to the contributions which others wish to make to what must now become an important national debate . ’
19 In what must now rank as one of the most well worn cliches of modern football , Peter Marinello was dubbed ‘ The Scottish George Best ’ , and with predictable results , the machinery of pop music , fashion and advertising pursued the young Hibernian player as if he was guaranteed to be the next big thing .
20 I believe we truly have something to celebrate , not only what has been achieved but what must now be possible in the coming decade .
21 He had been held , in the first place , because he had been caught carrying out what must now appear an ill-judged and irresponsible foray .
22 The pyramidical shape in that year reflected what must now be considered high mortality rates at all ages , and particularly among the very young .
23 Regions of the old DDR have been subsumed into the new federal states of Germany , and many of the sources are housed in what must now be called the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin , Preussischer Kulturbesitz — a name that in itself sums up the problems of uniting the two Germanies .
24 Dunadd fort clings to an isolated rocky hillock near Kilmartin , starkly visible from the road between Lochgilphead and Oban , above what must once have been a naturally protective boggy valley .
25 Even in the failing light , Theda could see that the drive was ill kept , and the surrounding gardens overgrown , and what must once have been a graceful line of trees bordering the rutted gravel lane now struck a flutter of apprehension in her breast .
26 What must always remain paramount is that the definition of God shall be so formulated that followers of occupations of every conceivable kind will be able to accept it , without any particular calling provoking in its members reason to doubt its value .
27 What must always have been clear to perceptive teachers , and what is now being documented in some detail in research , is that racism and sexism are experienced in numerous different ways , depending upon the groups concerned and the educational context .
28 His mood seemed to have lightened now , she noted with some relief , and pondered , frowning , over his unexpected reaction to what must certainly be her normal other-life guise .
29 What must never be forgotten is that the meaning of the word ‘ god ’ shall be such that its definition can be accepted by all the leading and reasonable people of all races , taught to all children , and be so firmly entrenched within the powers of reason and logic that it becomes inviolable .
30 Only so can we hope to retain their enthusiasm for what must inevitably sometimes seem a long and weary journey .
  Next page