Example sentences of "to [be] a key " in BNC.

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1 The catalogue raisonné continues to be a key document for authentication of an artist 's work .
2 This appears to be a key point , but it is one that is left controversial .
3 Third , a labour division of the High Court would contribute to the process of constitutional reform in Britain which surely is to be a key political issue in the 1990s .
4 Election ‘ 92 : Old-style Corinthian destined to be a key player
5 Later opium-like activity was found in a group of larger peptides , named endorphins , and of which enkephalin was shown to be a key fragment .
6 John James Robert Manners ( 1818–1906 ) , a son of the Duke of Rutland was to be a key figure in the campaign for a new Foreign Office .
7 ‘ Some people find it very satisfying to be a key worker .
8 ‘ He 's going to be a key figure at this club for the next three or four years , ’ said the Newcastle boss .
9 Hayez 's ‘ Pietro Rossi ’ , considered to be a key work in Romantic painting ( Bottega di San Luca ) sets the tone for the nineteenth-century section .
10 Instead , for a number of reasons , it proved to be a key step in the development of the debate about integration in Islington .
11 Anil Gadre , vice president of systems product marketing at Sun told Unigram a couple of weeks ago that a Sparc version of Novell 's Portable NetWare would arrive soon : meanwhile it 's thought the two will shortly announce NetWare SunLink to run on top of Sun 's Solaris 2.0 for Intel Corp platforms , which is thought to be a key part of Sun 's bid to capture a share of the Unix-on-Intel market .
12 It 's supposed to be a key moment , is n't it ?
13 Empowerment through widespread use of communication of information has been seen by Clark ( 1979 ) to be a key feature of the ringi-ko decision-making system , where printed documents circulate widely through the enterprise for comment and discussion .
14 It may serve a useful purpose for a universalized anthropological social psychology , but it will lack the necessary focus to be a key theoretical notion in a particular , historical social psychology .
15 For example , it assumes an entrance fee for resources that are by and large free , and it ignores not only the intervening opportunity of other sites but also personal preference , which is likely to be a key variable in a basically non-economically motivated activity .
16 She believed privacy to be a key requisite for a peaceful life .
17 Gordon was to be a key element in Profumo 's downfall , the event that dragged the Conservatives into an unwelcome part of the modern world .
18 The latter , during those days , was edited by Theodore Roszak , the American whose The Making of the Counter Culture ( 1970 ) was to be a key work of the early 1970s .
19 National Vocational Qualifications continue to be a key area of growth for the board .
20 We believe that regional government has proved to be a key economic regenerator of many of the European regions .
21 The polytechnics of the new binary policy were to be a key group of partners for the CNAA from roughly the beginning of the 1970s : the Assistant Director of Hatfield Polytechnic spoke of the polytechnics and the CNAA as ‘ inseparable …
22 Their overall inferior education is held to be a key factor world wide , and has been emphasised by data produced by the World Bank .
23 The political task of leading this debate has been fudged because essentially it is so unpopular , but rationing , whether covert or overt , formal or informal , will continue to be a key issue for the future .
24 It is destined to be a key object in the new Museum of Scotland .
25 Learning diaries are likely to be a key element in contributing towards NCVQ accreditation .
26 The man behind the take-over bid is understood to be a key figure in the Jersey tourist industry and has been trying unsuccessfully for years to get a Channel Island summer soccer tournament off the ground .
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