Example sentences of "must be regarded [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Its use does not preclude the side-by-side use of specific MAS checklists or work programmes but the SEPR must be regarded and treated as the lead control record .
2 He considered that the water supplies were ‘ very good ’ — a term that must be regarded as relative only , since the summit was in fact often short of water and there were , in several years , closures , reductions of tolls and tonnage limits imposed on the Watford to Foxton section , all on account of insufficient water to keep the two flights properly fed .
3 This rather limited list of excuses , laid down in section 39(2) of the 1944 Act , must be regarded as exhaustive .
4 The CEGB said that for Hinkley C this could total about £200 million , but ‘ since no large commercial nuclear power station in the world has yet been decommissioned , present cost estimates must be regarded as uncertain' .
5 But Manetho , who lived in the third century BC , wrote in Greek and his work must be regarded as Hellenistic in character rather than Egyptian .
6 For the purposes of law some actions must be regarded as voluntary , since only these can be justifiably punished .
7 A feature of this section is a stream issuing from Hackergill Cave on the south bank , but this , along with the other wonders of the river hereabouts , must be regarded as out of bounds by the prudent pedestrian .
8 This cave , also known as Diccan Pot , must be regarded as absolutely out of bounds for all but hardy and experienced cavers .
9 If one believes that education is for all children and must be regarded as in many ways the great equalizer , it is hard to accept the proposition that education in morality and religion should be left to parents whose fulfilment of this obligation will be far from equal .
10 For the present , mental responses to food must be regarded as ‘ unproven ’ , but with considerable circumstantial evidence in their favour .
11 The terms ‘ good ’ and ‘ evil ’ must be regarded as having had no meaning whatsoever in the infinity of time that preceded life on earth .
12 The ‘ god ’ to be worshipped evolved with life and must be regarded as having had common origin with it .
13 This decision to specify that remote evolutionary event as ‘ good ’ must be regarded as utterly inviolable if there is to be any belief at all in basic ‘ goodness ’ .
14 No matter how ruthless and cruel the evolutionary process may appear to be , it nevertheless must be regarded as having been inevitably so .
15 It must be regarded as being imbued with living quality and possessing special powers .
16 The strange occurrence at Ingrow Tunnel has not been explained by logical reasons and so must be regarded as , maybe , a paranormal phenomenon .
17 The case for antigravity must be regarded as ‘ not proven ’ — as Scottish jurors decree when they can not decide upon the guilt or innocence of the defendant .
18 Tests which are not based upon adequate linguistic descriptions must be regarded as lacking in construct validity .
19 Many other writers working in Southeast Asia have drawn attention to the fact that particular ethno-linguistic groups can not be treated in isolation , but must be regarded as forming part of a larger social system .
20 In a devastating criticism Jeffrey Stanyer concluded ‘ that the Maud Committee must be regarded as one of the most disastrous uses of an advisory committee that can be envisaged , if one asks and expects that an advisory committee will provide an authoritative analysis of the problems set by its terms of reference , and by rigorous reasoning propose defensible solutions which have a practical use ’ ( Stanyer 1970:66 — 7 ) .
21 The role of dreaming in this very important process must be regarded as slight .
22 It follows that the approach of the coroner was : whatever other facts there may be , whatever the impact on the cause of death of any extraneous supervening or concurrent event , the death must be regarded as ‘ natural ’ and an inquest will not be held , unless it qualifies , in the opinion of the coroner , as something equivalent to gross negligence , that is to say in effect , manslaughter either by act or by neglect .
23 He however submitted that the magistrate was obliged to look at the whole of the evidence emanating from Price and that , since Price had retracted his Swedish evidence in so far as it implicated the applicant , that evidence must be regarded as worthless and wholly unreliable , and so incapable of forming the basis of a committal .
24 Once again , however , that is not to say that the public 's post-appeal awareness of the essential contents of the P.C.A. documents must be regarded as wholly immaterial to the balancing exercise this court is now required to perform and to that too we shall return .
25 Lawrence must be regarded as authoritative and correct , and there is no question of it now being right to depart from it .
26 But the thesis that the set of basic entities is finite , while not altogether implausible , needs to be argued for , and as yet must be regarded as unproved .
27 It must be regarded as extremely probable that Oswiu was able to seek help in the confrontation with Penda not only from the Scots but also from the Picts , possibly even from the Irish ( see also below , p. 99 ) .
28 It must be regarded as probable , therefore , that under Aethelbald the Mercian position in areas bordering on other kingdoms was consolidated at the expense of surrounding neighbours .
29 Notwithstanding his extreme youth , his output was prodigious and far-ranging , and , with Keith Douglas and Alun Lewis [ qq.v. ] , he must be regarded as one of the outstanding poets of World War II , so much of his work having been inspired , before his brief sortie into battle , by an internal preparation for death .
30 Chomsky has claimed that the principles underlying the structure of language are so specific and so highly articulated that they must be regarded as being biologically determined ; that is , as constituting part of what we call " human nature " and as being genetically transmitted from parents to children .
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