Example sentences of "[vb infin] [vb pp] [to-vb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 They 're the side of Freud , that has tended to be ignored , even by the people you would 've expected to take the greatest notice of them .
2 and nineteen fifty so you would 've expected to see the same sort of increase .
3 Although a verbal apology would probably fit the bill , the offender may feel constrained to act the fool he expects to be accused of being .
4 To the extent that it preserves the concept of De Republica the scheme would appear designed to mirror an ideal that was ordinarily taken for granted .
5 Julian did not feel called to reform the church or to take part in public life : she remained a loyal daughter of Mother Church and stayed in seclusion for the rest of her life .
6 Rose would feel bound to reject an apology .
7 When he gets his way in a new ‘ voluntary agreement ’ ( which is likely once the industry gets over its panic on finding a Minister for Health rather than a Minister for Tobacco in the DoH ) he may feel bound to reject the ban .
8 Like Hsu , Fitzgerald had been a pupil of Malinowski , but he did not feel compelled to turn the Min Chia into Chinese .
9 You do n't feel compelled to say a great deal , to he interesting , to be the life and soul of the occasion .
10 American and Soviet leaders might also feel compelled to reach an understanding over a country/territory where the risks of direct military confrontation do not appear worth the pursuit of particular local or regional interests .
11 However , he tells us , he did feel compelled to defend the good name of accountants .
12 A government suffering such a reverse on the floor of the House of Commons would feel compelled to seek a dissolution .
13 In unique circumstances , where some might disagree , they may feel led to support a Christian organisation .
14 Such situations as were faced by these librarians in the early part of 1986 were not new and no doubt will recur , and librarians may well feel forced to take the same course of action in future .
15 I suppose he 'd feel entitled to use a woman 's body for this purpose as he would any other .
16 But the Labour Party dislikes this prospect , and avoided it in 1967 because of the fear that an elected House might feel entitled to challenge the supremacy of the Commons .
17 I say , I 'll I 've got to walk the end of the street , get a bus .
18 When someone is regularly and edifyingly prophesying with fruitful results , then it may be he will become known to have the ministry of a prophet .
19 He may have intended to use the symbolic value of the trophy to emphasise France 's achievements .
20 It may well be that the jury took the view that at the outset of the relationship with each businessman the appellant may genuinely have intended to do the work but subsequently failed to do so .
21 It is clear that , whether they succeeded or not , both the Criminal Law Revision Committee and the draftsman must have intended to give the word one meaning , which would be the same in the Act as in the committee 's report .
22 It was an essential element of the cause of action in such circumstances that the governmental plaintiff establish that the public interest would suffer detriment in the absence of a remedy ; ( 9 ) in failing to have proper regard to the legislative purpose of section 222(1) of the Local Government Act 1972 by which Parliament could not have intended to authorise a local authority to bring libel proceedings , a fortiori where it had suffered no actual financial loss ; ( 10 ) having regard to the scale of costs likely to be incurred it could never be in the interests of the inhabitants of the area for the local authority to mount an action for libel in such circumstances , and certainly was not in their interests in the present case where no injury was alleged to the superannuation fund .
23 This large implication is said to be justified because Parliament must have intended to preserve the long-standing immunity against questioning after charge , and can not have intended to create a régime which would ‘ make a mockery of ’ ( A. v. H.M.
24 This large implication is said to be justified because Parliament must have intended to preserve the long-standing immunity against questioning after charge , and can not have intended to create a régime which would ‘ make a mockery of ’ ( A. v. H.M.
25 ( 3 ) The draftsman could never have intended to permit a doctor to lawfully sub-contract all his work .
26 They may have intended to present the information as a factual account , or they may have been investigating a particular area with a view to using the material obtained as a background for a piece of more imaginative writing .
27 The point is , of course , that B might not have intended to communicate the assumption expressed by [ 15c ] .
28 Now these and similar comments would require careful scrutiny if the thrust of the argument were to the effect that Parliament could not have intended to establish an inquisitorial régime of this kind in relation to serious or complex fraud alone .
29 In these circumstances I think it clear , given the diversity of immunities and of the policies underlying them , that it is not enough to ask simply whether Parliament can have intended to abolish a long-standing right of silence .
30 Left home earlyish for his visit by rail to London to see his publishers ; been picked up by taxi at about 7.20 a.m. , almost certainly to catch the 07.59 , arriving Paddington at 09.03 ; obviously with only some fairly quick business to transact since he 'd appeared confident of meeting his commitments with the tourists at lunchtime at The Randolph , and then again during the afternoon ; likely as not , then , he would originally have intended to catch the 11.30 from Paddington , arriving Oxford at 12.30 .
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