Example sentences of "[that] [art] [noun pl] [modal v] be [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ( 1 ) A licensing board may , on an application in that behalf made to the board by any person interested in premises about to be constructed or in course of construction for use as licensed premises , make a provisional grant of a licence in respect of those premises if the board is satisfied ( a ) that the premises will be fit and convenient for their purpose , and that , if the premises had been completed in accordance with the plan thereof lodged with the board in pursuance of section 10 of this Act , the board would on application have granted such a licence in respect thereof .
2 ‘ The documents show that the companies will be able to go straight to the director general of water services for extra price increases , ’ he told the conference .
3 It is anticipated that the systems could be useful for a variety of applications including fleet management , customer credit control , plant loading , targeting direct mail campaigns , fraud detection , retail and materials analysis .
4 It was natural that the sermons should be indignant , but the ferocious exultation in them at the fate of the conspirators is in striking contrast to his usual gentleness .
5 And I have pointed out in my papers that you must bear in mind perhaps that er quite a number of Rich er quite a number of the districts in North Yorkshire are of county scale in their sheer size and that therefore it is not inappropriate that at that level that the policies would be refined .
6 By the end of May one prisoner had died , but there were no reports of the strike having ended , the authorities having ordered in mid-February that the prisoners should be force-fed .
7 There was unanimity among all but Mr Le Pen 's members that the neo-fascists would be unsuitable to represent Strasbourg abroad , especially at the Knesset .
8 It was not felt that the changes would be likely to deflect future military unrest .
9 Transient deterioration in neuropsychological function has been shown convincingly during short periods of experimental hyperphenylalaninaemia , and it has been argued that the changes may be due to neurotransmitter deficiency .
10 ‘ Nobody should imagine that the changes will be immediate , ’ he adds , ‘ but over the next decade the market share will fluctuate very considerably among the five major British ELT publishers . ’
11 I stress that I understand that the regulations will be general and that highway authorities will be given discretion to interpret them in the most appropriate way .
12 He emphasized , however , that the trials would be fair and open and that " the accused will have lawyers to defend them " .
13 They also ask that both paths should be clearly signed and that the paths should be open and not fenced on either side .
14 This does not , of course , guarantee truthfulness , but it must improve the chance that the replies will be honest .
15 The possibility that the effects could be due to internal contamination by radioactive substances , a chemical , or some other exposure at work should be explored .
16 Ruth added her own silent prayer that the puddings would be eatable .
17 One aspect of scientific style , however , is that in a passive sentence the person who acts is often not mentioned at all , to symbolise the scientific ideal that the procedures should be objective and repeatable , independent of the agent who carries them out .
18 Analysis on these lines often has a basis in lexical studies ( the Chubin & Moitra paper suggests subject analysis of reference contents from titles cited ) , and since metaphor plays such an important part in descriptions of the citation process ( Cronin 1981 ) , there is a danger that the models may be descriptive of a meta-reality which does not truly model the actual use of citations by authors and readers .
19 With some research topics , such as asking people to say what criminal offences they have committed , the only chance of getting any truthful answers would be with a guarantee that the answers would be confidential ( no one else would be told the answers given by a particular individual ) , and the best way of ensuring this is to allow respondents not to give their names ( anonymity ) .
20 Fuchs believes that the structures could be eraseable , for example by heating .
21 In answer to a question in the House , by Lord John Manners on 19th June , Hall stated that the judges would be able to make their award ‘ on or about 25th instant ’ .
22 Section 31(2) ( b ) of the Children Act 1989 provides that the justices must be satisfied :
23 The general point is that the colleges would be free to make whatever arrangements seemed best for the provision of services .
24 That the girls might be unaware of the camera rather than seducing it to death .
25 He was so forceful and dogmatic in his ideas that the Girls would be embarrassed at band calls when he interrupted acts , totally unknown to him , to tell them what he thought was wrong .
26 When it became possible that the assailants might be other children , the fiend could only be collectivised : an anti-society of the dispossessed , those beneath Christian morality whose drugged souls are already forfeit .
27 Originally it was thought that the bombings might be drug-related , but Vance had been involved in a case against the Ku Klux Klan in 1985 and Robinson had recently represented a black plaintiff in a school desegregation case .
28 It was always inevitable that the talks would be slow .
29 It is absoloutely essential that this should work effectively , efficiently , and economically in order that the customers will be satisfied and return .
30 Office forecast was that the winds would be light until late afternoon , then would increase to force five by dusk .
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