Example sentences of "[adv] [pron] one [modal v] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 The other tracts which were written by Lothar before he became pope show a pastoral concern , an interest in almsgiving , in sin , in penance , in the sacrament of marriage and in the priestly office ( " De sacro altaris mysterio " ) : perhaps what one might expect of a Paris theologian of this period .
2 As already noted , the library service , the educational administration and the inspectorate all make inputs , but the relative weight they carry is not necessarily what one would expect .
3 This is not something one would expect in a normal shop .
4 The series , called ‘ Horace ’ , met with mixed reactions mainly because the public generally feels that mental handicap is not something one should laugh about , or at least not admit to .
5 And , to make it all seem almost too good to be true the total number of possible W particles seen by both UA1 and UA2 is just what one would expect from the total number of proton-antiproton collisions that the two experiments have observed .
6 And this seems only natural , just what one would expect .
7 Within these one can still discern the ‘ earlier ’ items , whose syntactic combination in accordance with Montague 's formation rules involves only relatively minor peripheral modifications ( just what one would expect on the Sampson-Simon model ) .
8 The books available were just what one would expect ; R. L. Stevenson , Charles Kingsley .
9 And they had fought for their country in 1939 when the Irish Republic remained neutral which was , after all , just what one could expect of rebels who had taken advantage of Britain 's involvement in the First World War to stage the 1916 Easter Rising .
10 It was not what one would expect Aunt Margaret to have chosen for herself .
11 The performable format of Dame Sirith , however , is not what one would expect in light of the French tradition .
12 The portents are not what one would call auspicious .
13 The friend who watched them together recalled : ‘ Camilla was not what one would call a truly beautiful woman .
14 I thought of the Bonnard ; that was the reality ; such moments ; not what one could tell .
15 Evidence from the Home Office consultant pathologist , Professor Alan Usher , discovered no abnormality except pneumonia due to lung statis ; ‘ exactly what one would expect in poisoning by a respiratory depressant drug . ’
16 " The symptoms which follow this affection of the alimentary canal are exactly what one would expect .
17 Different stars have different spectra , but the relative brightness of the different colours is always exactly what one would expect to find in the light emitted by an object that is glowing red hot .
18 Nor , I realize now , was she exactly what one would call a liar : .
19 There is indeed a skill of craftsmanship in applying technology ; knowing just how far to go in programming the machine and what to do by hand ; selecting from the materials and technologies and applying them in different ways ; deciding exactly what one should attempt to achieve through technology .
20 Mr Powell told The Art Newspaper that ‘ extending an understanding to outreach audiences is clearly something one would like to address ’ .
21 The Handbook of Developmental Psychology , edited by Benjamin Wolman , covers nearly everything one could think of — as it should weighing in at £69 and nearly 5½ kg !
22 The anthropologist 's task is to map out this system , and , by using the tools of linguistic analysis , to draw up what one might call the grammar of the various cultures he encounters .
23 It was really what one would describe as almost a complete takeover .
24 Well I think really what one must look for now is more detailed research on what actually goes on in mixed ability classrooms .
25 Well I think really what one must look for now is more detailed research on what actually goes on in mixed ability classrooms .
26 This is precisely what one would expect if the above evolutionary account were true .
27 And most single people and er most young people in particular , fall outside that definition and that means that they really have no access to council housing of any kind and er they also find it very hard to get into the private rented sector , because of er the fact that 's it 's er , the rents are so high , and , and therefore they are at the mercy of erm basically the well , well loosely what one could describe as the bad landlords , the sharks , who will er exploit their situation .
28 A a at precisely the point where one one would expect them to be in the position to be able to encroach on the rich they are actually this is , this is the promotion of the rich peasant economy .
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