Example sentences of "[adj] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] [prep] be " in BNC.

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1 It can not be right for such information to be available , by a sidewind , for the court but the parties be prevented from presenting their arguments on such material .
2 That 's not the question , the question is is it right for this person to be found guilty , is it right for this person to be found innocent ?
3 That 's not the question , the question is is it right for this person to be found guilty , is it right for this person to be found innocent ?
4 ‘ The Government does not believe that it would be right for this case to be treated as a precedent . ’
5 It is quite possible for one organisation to be audited at five levels , as well as being accountable to internal decision-making bodies , political masters , and the law .
6 An immediate and obvious problem with pluralists ' methods is that in the effort to achieve falsifiability , only major visible issues reaching decisional status are used , yet of course it is possible for pre-decisional power to be used to keep grievances from becoming observable issues .
7 It is therefore perfectly possible for social care to be provided in an ordinary household with rehabilitation and personal development as its main purpose ; in other words , the therapy itself is of a social care nature .
8 More than four-fifths of non-executives thought it was undesirable for one person to be both chairman and chief executive .
9 It would be undesirable for this process to be fully automated .
10 It is usual for all salami to be sliced very finely .
11 His original intention was to do research in Political Geography , but Central Europe was at that time too political for such research to be practical .
12 ‘ But it is totally wrong for personal postage to be subsidised for her and even the most obscure royals . ’
13 Society must be very mixed up when so many terminally ill people want to die but are denied the chance while others think it is morally wrong for this child to be born .
14 Yes Chairman i it relates to the the body of the policies in the structure plan and if Aida 's plan generally conforms then we must er issue a statement of general conformity er however if there is a , a problem that we 've had for example about the wording of the reference to the erm East Worthing access road , then although that it 's quite proper for this committee to be concerned about that wording and ultimately possibly even to object to the plan on the basis of the wording , it does n't affect the extent to which the plan conforms or does n't conform with the structure plan overall .
15 In this category we might expect to find phonological and grammatical features which are sufficiently different from British English to be salient , but which do not involve , in J.C .
16 This approach , if valid , would enable estimates of the burial history of the Palaeozoic in this region to be considerably improved .
17 He was too high on exultant relief to be deflated so easily .
18 One author denounced the Convention for making William King without making it " impossible for that king to be like the kings that went before him " ; another condemned the members of the Convention because
19 The language and rituals of the chapel were , as we have seen , so uncompromisingly masculine that it would have seemed impossible for printing-house life to be the same again once women were admitted to the craft .
20 Would it not be appropriate for this situation to be remedied by putting Charles Darwin on a new £100 note to emphasise to the world , in these uncertain times , our tradition of change by evolution and not revolution ?
21 It is all too easy for this principle to be forgotten .
22 Charles III 's reforms improved the quality of the imperial civil service while denying to the creoles a share in the system — perhaps because , as Floridablanca maintained , creoles were too enmeshed in local graft to be trusted .
23 It was unfair for one man to be so attractive .
24 — Mr. Gould has left a blank for this name to be put in , in one of his M.S. pages .
25 They were sparingly given , and the deed had to be exceptional for any award to be made ; many of the Carnegie Medals were given posthumously .
26 The Faculty of Homoeopathy would certainly concur with Simon Crawford 's view that it is absolutely unethical for any medicine to be sold as natural and especially as homoeopathic if it were to include pharmacologically active ingredients , whether hormonal or otherwise .
27 But it soon seemed natural for one man to be held first among equals ; or the first prominent convert in a city , like Stephanas at Corinth ( 1 Cor. 16 : 15–16 ) , might form a community round his household .
28 Conditions of warm daytime temperatures and high humidity combined with much cooler night time temperatures are ideal for humid air to be trapped in tanks by day and condensed out by night ’ .
29 But it is unusual for personal care to be given by non-related carers ( Evandrou et al. , 1986 , Grant , 1986 ) .
30 It was n't unusual for human flesh to be the bait in an industry where million-pound budgets were on offer .
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