Example sentences of "[adj] [be] [verb] to be " in BNC.
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1 | THE BRITISH are said to be fascinated by the weather and talk of little else when the talk is small . |
2 | For even at the generally modest level of competition that Beckenham offers , the British are shown to be dismal failures . |
3 | Yet because the old are seen to be more ill , more often than other age groups , illness and old age have become closely associated in our minds , leading to the belief that the old have to suffer and bear an unavoidable amount of pain and discomfort . |
4 | As a general rule , documents which are more than 20 years old are deemed to be " ancient " and are presumed to be authentic unless proved otherwise ( Evidence Act 1938 , s4 ) . |
5 | Therefore , word sequences that are grammatically acceptable are considered to be more plausible than word sequences that are grammatically unacceptable . |
6 | Therefore , word sequences that are semantically acceptable are considered to be more plausible than word sequences that are not semantically acceptable . |
7 | From the outset , despite the talk of ‘ equality ’ with Germany , the French were determined to be the prominent power in EDC . |
8 | In 1759 the French were known to be preparing an invasion of Scotland in which French forces would sail and rouse any remaining Stuart rebels . |
9 | And the worst part of being unemployed is having to be always broke … thinking over where 's the next money going to come from . |
10 | Well if through the winter months when there 's no fire in there , no nothing in there the damp is bound to be coming through there . |
11 | It belongs to German nature to present oneself as un-German : a tendency to cosmopolitanism , to undermine the sense of nationhood are inseparable from the essence of German nationality ; the idea that one must lose one 's Germanness as much as possible in order to find it , that any restriction to the purely German is felt to be barbaric . |
12 | One solution is to adopt the North American practice of providing patients with a comprehensive list of postoperative complications , but to most British doctors the prospect of burdening patients with ‘ unwanted ’ information about what might go wrong is deemed to be both unhelpful and unkind . |
13 | However , anything which is non-zero is considered to be TRUE . |
14 | Despite the fact that any notion of ‘ the will of the collectivity ’ would be alien to the Piaroa , the ability to be social is considered to be the most important and valued characteristic of humans living on this earth . |
15 | What Derrida argues is that any discourse which conceives of itself as scientific is bound to be logocentric : it will assume that it is transparent to its object and that that object is a stable entity . |
16 | The Japanese are said to be keen to invest more , but worry about the safety of their executives there . |
17 | Now , you remember the really big puzzle on there , the imaginary bit goes there , and minus seven of something along the route bit and minus twenty four of them , so I 'm going minus seven six hundred and twenty fifths there , minus twenty four , seven , so the actual lines go like that , so the one point nine at that angle , so the actual is going to be which is two sixty one point nine . |
18 | The value of the kind of team approach which operates in Jamkhed is beginning to be recognized in other rural areas in India . |
19 | While applauding the women of anger , Miki was worried that it might mean that anyone who writes about anything less traumatic and violent is considered to be less important . |
20 | He has maintained that form and given that 40-plus is reckoned to be the minimum Test average for a truly great player , he should eventually retire — who knows when — with the record he wants . |
21 | ( 1.3 ) The possible argument consists in the premiss ( 1 ) that decisions and the like are taken to be effects but also to be no more than events which follow on conditions which are required for them , the further premiss ( 2 ) that it is to be presumed that we have a single conception of effects rather than several , and the conclusion ( 3 ) that all effects , including what have been called standard effects , are merely events preceded by conditions required for them . |
22 | The marginal costs of providing this particular public good are assumed to be constant . |
23 | By 1936 , the year of Rowntree 's second survey in York , 15 per cent of the poor were found to be old people , but this was still adjudged to be a far less significant cause of poverty than unemployment or low wages . |
24 | On the other hand , an excess of isolated teeth is all the more unlikely to be due to sampling error , and so excess is considered to be significant and to indicate preferential destruction of mandibles and maxillae . |
25 | Although the private good is assumed to be reputation from complying with an established custom of membership , it could also be regarded as any other form of excludable union benefit that is increasing in membership . |
26 | The mask she has to wear in order to be accepted as an equal is seen to be seriously flawed . |
27 | Do n't be so severe with me , Gildas , I 'm under an awful strain , I think something terrible is going to be required of me . ’ |
28 | In the first place , though the sense of want is acute and even painful , yet the mere wanting is felt to be somehow a delight . |
29 | the current is going to be something like multiplied by the voltage . |
30 | The Long Library , almost 200 ft. long is considered to be the room of the most outstanding beauty for it contains over 10,000 books plus various paintings by Van Dyck and Reynolds . |