Example sentences of "[noun sg] then [verb] to [be] " in BNC.

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1 The practice then has to be " proved " by evidence as to the intention of the parties , expert evidence on a trade practice or usage , a trade or technical gloss on the meaning of a particular term , or even as a separate term implied into the rules .
2 The advantage of being able to store such a file on a direct access device in addresses which are directly related to the key then has to be balanced against the waste of space involved .
3 This loneliness then tends to be misdiagnosed as depression and medications may be prescribed which may make the disease even worse .
4 The lesson which can be learnt from South Africa regarding professionalism then seems to be that , as I pointed out last month , there is a contradiction in allowing a mercenary spirit to dominate an amateur game .
5 Attention then had to be directed towards identifying the conditions under which recency rather than primacy would be shown .
6 The rationale for intervention then appears to be the degree of error .
7 The nose then has to be hauled well up to break the descent rather than the aeroplane .
8 The completion of the agenda then needs to be followed by a review process , either formal or informal , which analyses the factors contributing to a successful or unsuccessful activity in terms of the perceptions of all the individuals involved .
9 That commercial television then proved to be popular is beside the point .
10 The last wish then has to be used to restore one each of these to its proper place .
11 It was part of a wider agricultural system with sheep pastured on the rich meadow grass then walked to be folded on fallow arable areas overnight , where their dung helped to maintain fertility on the thin chalkland soils .
12 It is , indeed , quite a common occurrence for a government to have second thoughts about a Bill during or after its progress through the Commons and to use its supporters in the House of Lords to make the changes in a Bill then seen to be desirable .
13 The choice then appears to be between informalism , in which individualized solutions to disputes are worked out and accepted by the parties , and the formal judicial process .
14 ‘ Art ’ music , for example , is generally regarded as by nature complex , difficult , demanding ; ‘ popular ’ music then has to be defined as ‘ simple ’ , ‘ accessible ’ , ‘ facile ’ .
15 He did not seem to appreciate the contradiction between his virulent denunciations of parliamentary democracy and the increasingly close economic ties being woven between Spain and the western democracies ; nor between his belief that economic nationalism was best and the fact that unless Spain liberalized its economic policies , it would remain isolated from the growth then beginning to be enjoyed by the rest of Europe .
16 But conversely ( as Mr. Utley did not feel able to dispute , although he did not formally concede the point ) a defendant who is legally aided at first instance and in the Court of Appeal , but who for any reason then ceases to be aided and incurs the full costs of successfully resisting an appeal to the House of Lords , is eligible to recover those costs from the board .
17 The problem then needs to be formulated in scientific terms and this requires the object to have some property which is unique to its origin , but which varies from place to place and is not significantly modified by manufacture ; the property must also be scientifically detectable .
18 The unit then requires to be replaced .
19 The Christie family then seemed to be marked .
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