Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [be] [vb pp] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The van the teams will be using is provided by Broxhead motors .
2 Some indication of the disparities to be explained is contained in Table 2.1 .
3 And the assumption that they can be given is grounded on faith alone .
4 The more relevant LIFESPAN forms and outputs you will be seeing are shown in Figure 2.4 .
5 In the figure , the main information to be recalled is shown in block letters , while the logical relationships are shown in lower case letters at the nodes ( joining points ) of the lines .
6 The techniques to be considered are listed in Table 8.1 .
7 Errors which may be reported are described in Appendix B.
8 The people to be interviewed are known as freight forwarding agents , who act for individual exporters and importers .
9 In the light of Government protestations that safety is of the highest order , the idea that that service should be privatised is brought into focus .
10 A much better example of how the basic allocation is to be done is shown in Prowle , Jones & Shaw , and I reproduce it in Table 3. 1 with acknowledgement to them .
11 All that remains to be said is incised on stone , and the living go around silently with long faces and glances that mean ‘ I ca n't tell you how sorry I am , but I do know how you feel . ’
12 At Ainaro , as many men as could be collected were put under Gerry Mackenzie 's command — there was nothing ‘ base ’ about these wallahs .
13 The grounds on which this remedy could be sought were summarized by Lord Diplock in the GCHQ case under the three headings of illegality , irrationality and procedural impropriety .
14 One of the earliest detailed discussions of how the artefacts of the period might be dated was provided by Åberg ( 1926 , pp. 149–58 ) , although typically there is no consideration of what such chronology could be used for beyond using it to relate the archaeological data to an historical narrative :
15 Details of the secondary booklet and of how it is intended to be used are given in Chapter 4 , which presents case studies of two secondary schools making use of it .
16 The information to be entered is described at Section 4 .
17 Many of the boundary roads to which through traffic would be displaced are lined with housing : as Plowden comments , ‘ the environmental consequences of imposing yet heavier traffic burdens on them can not be dismissed simply by christening them ‘ arterial roads ’ or ‘ distributors ’ . ’
18 The package to be updated is read from LIFESPAN , updated to reference the modules to be incorporated in the baseline , and then entered back into LIFESPAN .
19 ( The exact procedure to be followed is described in Section 3.1 . )
20 However , this is not done where Ord 17 r 11 ( automatic directions ) applies , unless the case had been set down for hearing in the High Court before transfer or a request for a day for hearing to be fixed is made under Ord 17 , r 11(3) ( d ) .
21 The way that these forms of social control can be mobilised is illustrated by newspaper coverage of the events of Bloody Sunday , 30 January 1972 ( see Chapter 5 ) .
22 The conditions which must be fulfilled are known as felicity conditions .
23 The question is easily answered where the two types of liability to be excluded are covered by sections of the UCTA which only render the clause unenforceable if it fails to satisfy the requirement of reasonableness ( for instance s 2 , property damage , and s 6(3) , implied warranty of quality ) .
24 The first version of the tape to be discovered was made by Oxford secretary Jane Norgrove , 25 , and her father Mick .
25 Details of where they can be obtained are given on p. 146 .
26 The effect , however , turned out to be a somewhat elusive one in subsequent research , until the conditions under which it can be obtained were elucidated by Johnston and McClelland ( 1973 ) .
27 The procedure for seeking access to information and the circumstances in which it may be denied are discussed at Chapter 16 , 10 .
28 As explained in the introduction , the diagnostic groups , age groups , calendar periods , and areas to be analysed were agreed in advance of the analyses being carried out .
29 Some of the ways in which this may be achieved are shown in table 7.1 .
30 Projects to be funded are selected by committees of scientists , occasionally joined by politicians and civil servants .
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