Example sentences of "[det] a [noun] must be [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Such a development must be welcomed as being in line with the requirements of dynamic competition and capable of increasing the competitiveness of European industry , improving the conditions of growth and raising the standard of living in the Community …
2 However , such a course must be adopted with great care .
3 But an empirical recognition that in some circumstances a particular productive force ( say , a composer or a performer ) may not be wholly homogenized means that such a possibility must be allowed on the level of theory .
4 C. 59 , p. 1 ) , such a possibility must be excluded .
5 The implications of such a change must be recognised by management and by the public .
6 Such a prosecution must be taken in the sheriff court ( s. 128(1) ) and the maximum penalty for a contravention of subs .
7 Such a notice must be displayed at any premises where the business is carried on and to which customers and suppliers have access .
8 But such a model must be applied with caution .
9 Of course , such a routine must be used with some flexibility .
10 It rightly adds that the exercise of such a right must be done ‘ while keeping in mind the necessary unity of the whole Church ’ , but also that a ‘ strict observance of this traditional principle is among the prerequisites for any restoration of unity ’ .
11 Such a comparison must be made with caution , however , as some early counts of large numbers were made from boats some way off shore , for example by E. T. Booth ; similar data for recent years are not available .
12 Apart from this , such a search must be authorised by an officer of the rank of inspector or above .
13 Now such a mechanism must be identified which connects content and form inside the aesthetic realm .
14 Such a body must be registered with the Registrar of Companies ; default leading to limited partners being treated as unlimited ones .
15 The termini post quos of these finds could be tabulated with the diagnostic contents of each context , but the value of such an exercise must be tempered by the fundamental problem of the chronological association of the coins and the other artefacts and their respective use-life .
16 But such an elder must be understood as likely to recover verbal consciousness , and should not be assessed as ‘ confused ’ or of ‘ low intelligence ’ .
17 However , the advantages of such an arrangement must be weighed against the potential disadvantages of there not being particular nurses who get to know the at-risk patients really well .
18 However , given that a demand must be served before proceedings could be taken , it does not follow that Mr. Thomas 's second proposition is correct .
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