Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] be part " in BNC.
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1 | The farms themselves may be categorised into three broad types on the basis of their layout : one or a few buildings seemingly in isolation or associated with earlier structures , for instance late prehistoric enclosures or , as at Lower Warbank ( Kent ) , a single sunken building adjacent to a Roman villa ( Philp 1973 , pp. 156–63 ) , which may only be part of larger settlements ; individual farmsteads , a group of buildings associated with a fenced enclosure or paddock , such as Cowdery 's Down ( Millett 1983 ) ; thirdly , larger settlements with either multiples of the previous category or a farmstead apparently with a larger number of ancillary buildings , such as Chalton , Hampshire and West Stow , Suffolk ( West 1985 ) . |
2 | Spitting on people should not be part of the game . |
3 | And I object to it , as I consider that O S fields seven three six five and six eight six two with the land extending westwards to the A Nineteen , should not be part of the Skelton inset area . |
4 | The Royal Commission on Legal Services concluded that this sort of work should not be part of the responsibilities of the citizens ' law centres that were proposed . |
5 | Also the meeting was not a year ago as your report states , but only this month and we do n't say that Thornaby should not be part of Stockton borough . |
6 | Third , other places which feel the effect of soil erosion downstream in the form of deposition and floods must also be part of the place-based analytical concern for soil erosion for two reasons . |
7 | If aspects of CAB policy that the adviser questions arise during training , then it must also be part of training to show how advisers might try to influence CAB policy . |
8 | Fighting for justice should indeed be part of the Great Battle — God forbid that our fight has no social and political cutting edge — but it must never become a secular substitute for it . |
9 | The inferences are systematic , they are decodable by different interpreters in the same way , and without most of them the exchange can not be understood ; most of them must therefore be part of what is communicated , in Grice 's strict sense of meant-nn . |
10 | This should ideally be part of a course of lessons from a skilled teaching professional if you are to use your time and effort efficiently . |
11 | On the transport of nuclear weapons , which is covered in the Drell report and should therefore be part of the Oxburgh report , will the right hon. Gentleman undertake to give local authorities notice when nuclear weapons are to be transported through their localities ? |
12 | Although ‘ in-depth ’ may not be part of Howard Barker 's vocabulary , I am sure he believes his play is far from superficial . |
13 | It can also thus be the entrée into a further development : Hilton stresses that this may not be part of the natural development of his particular correspondent . |
14 | the tape recording of individual children 's oral performance for assessment purposes might not be part of normal classroom activity and thus not in line with TGAT recommendations . |
15 | In all three cases , the responses to the public consultation revealed concern that trusts might not be part of the NHS and that services might be fragmented . |
16 | But masonry of this nature might equally be part of a dock or quay , so the correct position of the Roman bridge still remains in considerable doubt . |
17 | Otherwise , they might simply be part of the background . |
18 | Humming pickups , poorly grounded leads , or the waves of hiss emanating from your preamp and effects might well be part of your sound , but they create an editing nightmare . |
19 | Adorno 's criteria force him to see , for example , blue notes as ‘ distortions ’ , pseudo-individual embellishments of ‘ correct ’ pitches ; but blue notes may conceivably be part of a different pitch system with its own correctness . |
20 | Mr Urbanec , who is to hold further talks with Mr Havel today — this time in front of television cameras — conceded that the party realised it was held in deep mistrust by the public , and accepted that henceforth it could only be part of the political spectrum . |
21 | I realised that that was an absurdity … after the evidence that India could not be part of the same political system , I still believed for a short time that an Empire of positions — that is to say the possession of points of communication around the globe — gave a significance to this country and a tenable and lasting position . |
22 | It follows that the two articles in the Sunday Times could not be part of a ‘ successful dirty tricks campaign ’ by Murrin . |
23 | When she read those magazines , did she think she 'd ever be part of that world ? |
24 | There could also be parts of the universe containing more anti-matter than matter . |
25 | He could n't be part of their brotherhood but he wanted to be among them . |
26 | He was avid for news of how it was all going , and regretting that he could n't be part of it . |
27 | ‘ Then it was realised that the collection could n't be part of Backhouse , because a lot of the specimens had been collected before Backhouse was even born . ’ |
28 | How had it happened , this tragedy of falling in love with a man who could never be part of her destiny ? |
29 | In Do n't Count Yourself Out , to be published as an original paperback by Pan in June , Mr Connors emphasises that stress need not be part of keeping fit . |
30 | Traces of this can be found in shamanism and Mithraism , and may well be part of the ancient Egyptian mysteries . |