Example sentences of "[that] [noun] [modal v] always " in BNC.

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1 The obsession with sex in our society has conditioned us to assume that intimacy must always mean sex .
2 In the particular case of a minister 's decision fixing the tariff period for a life sentence prisoner , there is not in my opinion a requirement that reasons should always be given .
3 Nor does the thesis claim that authorities should always act in the interests of their subjects .
4 It is vital that schools should always remember that preparation for working life is one of their principal functions .
5 That leads directly to the central hermeneutic theme that action must always be understood from within .
6 Shamir and company persist , mulishly , in their contention that Arafat will always be Arafat ; thus , according to the Deputy Foreign Minister , Benyamin Netanyahu , ‘ the PLO says … flat out ’ that it seeks ‘ Israel 's annihilation .
7 Mrs Singh said that she felt that Balbinder would always do what was wanted if it suited him .
8 It is only from some insistence , within some other social and cultural order , that signals should always be singular in dimension — indicating ‘ pure art ’ and the ‘ purely aesthetic ’ in manifestly specializing , and then both emphasizing and excluding , ways — that these historical and sociological complexities are resisted .
9 ‘ I 've — finished with him , yes , ’ she told him stiffly , ‘ but only now do I realise that Travis will always be someone special for me . ’
10 I am instructed to indicate that Broderick will always feel extremely upset . ’
11 It is questionable that texts can always be read as favourably as she seeks to do .
12 How long before she learned that folk 'll always take advantage of weakness ?
13 While stressing IBM good behaviour , IBM chairman John Opel in a speech in London in May 1984 told Europeans that IBM could always take its investment elsewhere .
14 Do not imagine , however , that lectures will always be held in the order shown in the syllabus or even that they will cover every aspect of it .
15 It is not obvious that governments should always be free to ban them .
16 He was marginally cheered by a sign near the ticket barrier warning that Dogs Must Always Be Carried On Moving Escalators .
17 But these ideas soon became diluted ( very much along ‘ neoclassical ’ lines ) , ‘ Perhaps because of the English Common Law tradition that room should always be left to accommodate the peculiarities of individual cases ’ ( ibid. , p.727 ) .
18 Cyprio point out that water should always trickle down through foam not up , as otherwise it will float up .
19 The idea that stories should always show the ideal would soon , one feels , convince young readers that literature is not about life , or about any life the reader knows .
20 In the political world there were issues that Unionists could always exploit against a Liberal government such as defence policy and the administration of the Empire .
21 It is disturbing because , ultimately , the student comes to see that things could always be other than they are .
22 In his speech Shamir said that Israel should always maintain control over the occupied territories in order that future immigrants could be settled .
23 All the best books on cat care insist that cats should always have access to fresh , clean water and that the water should be changed regularly .
24 A few minutes before , he had tried to add ‘ We apologize for nothing ’ to the rules in his head , but he knew that Sara would always move him to compunction .
25 McKinsey , the leading management consulting group , which advised on the restructuring , held the firm view that people should always fulfil the specifications of the job .
26 Because of the assumption that people will always squeal politically if their toes are trodden on , pluralists tend to interpret political inactivity as a sign of a rough satisfaction with the prevailing state of things .
27 The learned abbot , Lupus of Ferrières , consoling the layman Einhard on the death of his wife , pointed out that God had allowed Absalom to be killed despite the prayers of David ; and Agobard , archbishop of Lyon , writing against superstition , asked Louis the Pious what use it was to suppose that God would always show up the just in judicial ordeals , when he had allowed Josiah to perish in battle against the Egyptians .
28 It had been only a few hours , but that was enough to ensure that birthdays would always fall on public holidays and the correct number of hours could therefore be spent languishing .
29 Despite this forthright tone , later parts of the document point out that ‘ the scheme will be structured in a way that patients will always get the drugs they need ’ and that ‘ it will ensure that budgets reflect the costs of patients needing a greater volume of drugs or more expensive drugs … ’ ‘ so that there will be no disincentive to practices to accept such patients or to begin to prescribe expensive medicine to such patients , if there is a clinical need to do so ’ .
30 Regardless of the amount of time involved it seems likely that staff will always opt for more time if this is offered to them .
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