Example sentences of "[Wh pn] [vb mod] be [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 There are , of course , many schools other than those listed in the appendix , and also a great many private coaches , all of whom may be found in the publication Contacts , a trade book everyone interested in joining the profession should obtain from the office of The Spotlight , 42–43 Cranbourn St , London WC2H 7AP .
2 Furthermore , we have not dealt clearly enough with the position of those students who may be living in the same property as their landlord .
3 Although the phrase ‘ care workers ’ is not in general use , the term has been chosen to describe a wide range of people who may be employed in the voluntary or statutory sectors and who have responsibility for the services made available in the community to support old people and their caring relatives .
4 The draftsman should , therefore , consider whether to impose on the tenant a limit to the number of persons who may be employed in the demised property in order to avoid overloading the available facilities .
5 In social terms it is a rather heterogeneous group , although it almost certainly excludes the lowest income groups , who may be caught in the housing and job ‘ traps ’ in inner-city areas ( Department of the Environment 1977a ) .
6 First on the list of their declared objectives was ‘ The establishment of a store for the sale of provisions , clothing etc. ’ ; and third ‘ To commence the manufacture of such articles as the Society may determine upon , for the employment of such members as may be without employment , or who may be suffering in consequence of repeated reductions in their wages . ’
7 For example , in a closed institution , such as a factory , a school or a prison , the records will give a great deal of information about people who may be included in a survey .
8 The better-known writers who may be included in this category are Wilson ( 1975 ) , Van Den Haag ( 1975 ) and Ehrlich ( 1975 ) in the United States , and Clark ( 1980 ) in Britain .
9 The treatment must be by , or under the direction of , a registered medical practitioner who may be specified in the order .
10 In particular , both women considered that the attitudes to them was part of the broader set of links made between Catholicism and the status of women who should be based in the family and the home rather than in the world of work .
11 Very often this will be coming from a different department , who should be alerted in good time .
12 And you , our loyal Super Sport readers , can make your own choice about who should be honoured in The People 's British Star of Sport 1992 merit awards .
13 In addition to establishing the coherence of a specifically identifiable Genoese artistic tradition , the catalogue emphatically challenges the hierarchy which values painting over other forms of aesthetic expression , particularly emphasising the role of such sculptors as Filippo Parodi and Pierre Puget , who should be viewed in a Mediterranean rather than in a French context .
14 But if her snarling face in the mirror is any indication , Snow White 's the one who should be quaking in her boots .
15 Simultaneously the status of the professional improved as players began to assert themselves not as ‘ club servants ’ or ‘ skilled workmen ’ but as entertainers who should be paid in accordance with their market value .
16 He 's one of a thousand pilots who 'll be flying in this weekend for Europe 's biggest exhibition of home-made planes .
17 He seemed about to drop off as he said : ‘ Pity it 's Viola who 'll be raking in the dough , is n't it ? ’
18 I know they 've invited a lot of guests , who 'll be staying in the house .
19 ‘ I 'm not sure who 'll be playing in my place , the manager has Danny Wilson , Chris Bart-Williams , Graham Hyde and John Harkes to choose from .
20 He glanced over his shoulder and Snodgrass , who loved gossip , glanced over his as well , because you never knew who might be listening in an enchanted castle .
21 An account is given which explains present practices without recourse to justifying the feelings of anyone who might be implicated in the practices .
22 There is a tendency , I I hope not of er this management team but there is a tendency of some people who who might be employed in future to feel that solutions can be obtained by purchasing and I 'm not always convinced that that is the case .
23 The figure that my right hon. and learned Friend the Secretary of State for Employment gave included those who might be affected in other ways by premature closure .
24 Nothing too conspicuous : this is broad daylight , and one never knows who might be sitting in the next taxi , stuck in a queue along Knightsbridge .
25 It unites six established British artists who might be linked in a wider definition of The School of London .
26 And who could be cast in the inevitable biopic of the greatest living Irishman ?
27 Yet they were here today in gratifying numbers , a double row of Larks looking very bronzed and weathered from striding over those ancestral acres , which men like her husband and Lizzie Braithwaite 's husband could never possess ; and their cousin , Colonel Covington-Pym , Master of Foxhounds , with his rather glorious , highly intimidating wife , a tall , red-haired woman who could be seen in Frizingley sometimes wearing a black riding-habit so tight that she must have been stitched into it — Linnet said — and mounted on a colossus of a horse very nearly the same colour as her hair .
28 It requires ‘ systematic arrangements ’ for assessing and reviewing both health needs and social care needs of people with mental health problems who could be treated in the community , as well as ‘ effective systems ’ for ensuring the delivery of the services needed .
29 Brian 's enthusiasm was such that I could n't keep up my negative stance and was soon busy designing peat-moulding machinery , marketing plans and discussing the number of people who could be employed in such schemes .
30 It involved the registration of the seafaring inhabitants of the coastal areas of France ( and later also of the population on the banks of navigable rivers ) and the creation in this way of a pool of experienced sailors who could be used in manning the fleet .
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