Example sentences of "to be carry " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Spooner 's idea came from an invitation by his actor-neighbour , Jim Dale , to visit the set of the latest Carry On … film at Pinewood — which just happened to be Carry On Cleo . |
2 | There was also going to be Carry On Dallas , a parody on the TV series . |
3 | Field already had two vessels on loan from the American and British navies and wanted cable-laying to be carried out within what we today would term the summer weather window . |
4 | He also warned : ‘ I prefer it not to be carried because the Conservatives , who are desperately clinging at straws because of the popularity of our policy , against the irrelevance of theirs , would do what they could to make mischief about it . ’ |
5 | But one health authority finance officer said it looked ‘ inconceivable ’ that the budget could be balanced without service cuts , in the winter or next year , unless extra cash was provided or health ministers allowed the deficit to be carried forward . |
6 | The inspectorate attaches mandatory conditions to the site licence - covering , for example , the need for maintenance to be carried out as specified in the maintenance instructions — and for inspections and tests also to be conducted in accordance with written procedures . |
7 | Planning Ward v Secretary of State for the Environment ; CA ( Woolf , Nicholls , Staughton LJJ ) ; 25 Sept 1989 A private garden was capable of being an ‘ open space ’ and something that should be taken into account when deciding whether a development proposed to be carried out in a conservation area would preserve or enhance the area within s 277 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 , as substituted , and of Circular No 8 of 1987 issued by the Secretary of State . |
8 | They are planning a 100 per cent digital phone system that will enable voice images and data to be carried on the line . |
9 | New methods will come , no doubt , with the fruition of that research which the Home Secretary has urged and supported ; but we can not even claim to be using existing methods , when 7,550 prisoners are sleeping tonight three in a cell , and when policies which , but for the war , would have been on the statute book in 1939 , and have already been on the statute book for half a generation , have hardly begun to be carried into effect for lack of premises . |
10 | for example , BBC Television on the evening of the 11 July Day of Action , and the papers next morning , were full of pictures of injured policemen , but the pickets who were injured were hardly mentioned , although among them was a man who had had an epileptic fit , a woman who had collapsed at the rear entrance to the factory and two Yorkshire miners who had to be carried away by their friends . |
11 | The Marine Conservation Society , a national organisation , alleges in a 54-page document that Britain has failed to meet the terms of a European directive requiring an assessment to be carried out where a proposed development is likely to have a significant environmental impact . |
12 | In addition , the CEGB has more than doubled , from £3.1 billion to £6.4 billion , the extra provisions needed ‘ for work still to be carried out on nuclear fuel and wastes from past years ’ . |
13 | Mr Geoffrey Barnes , Hong Kong 's secretary for security , said the action had been taken only after ‘ repeated efforts to obtain the co-operation of boat people and warnings that the search would have to be carried out regardless of their objections ’ . |
14 | The administration of the Services was to be carried out by three co-located but separate Service Departments , each under a junior minister . |
15 | If such a measure were to be carried ( and a similar one is likely to be introduced in the Senate ) , Mr Bush could use force only at the risk of a domestic , and indeed a constitutional , crisis . |
16 | Rain caused delays at Lord 's so that the match had to be carried over till Sunday , but it made no difference to Richards . |
17 | She wanted to be carried . |
18 | You said I was too big to be carried . |
19 | For a start , it allows spreading to be carried over a longer period during the winter months ( Table 1 ) . |
20 | Once he actually fainted in the mud and had to be carried back to the house and revived with cold water . |
21 | It had taken her three full days and now they were to be carried downstairs and arranged in the hall , after which her sister would take them to the post office . |
22 | You leapt for the cleaner banks and I allowed myself to be carried on by the filth of deceit , of shame , and of a guilt that even now I can not put into public or private words . |
23 | Only two days previously , the Supreme Command of the Wehrmacht had suggested lines of propaganda to be carried out after the expected triumph in Stalingrad ‘ in the next days ’ , and took pride in the excellent planning of the Reich 's military leadership after the mistakes of the previous winter . |
24 | We have not mentioned what happens if the cause of death is unknown and inquests or autopsies have to be carried out ; or if the deceased person wanted to donate organs ; if they wanted to be buried in another country , and so on . |
25 | In the mean time , the Forest administration was to be carried on as usual . |
26 | Rush , later to be carried off with what Mr Bonds termed a ‘ bad groin injury ’ , also had a shot turned aside by Flowers , who later flung himself to keep out a stinging shot by Allen . |
27 | Further research is to be carried out among 5,000 people who survived childhood cancer and were born before 1969 . |
28 | The treatment plan is not equipped to deal effectively with waste of such high chemical toxicity , and so much of it is passed out in the Yellow Creek to be carried away into the Cumberland River , with the result that the creek has become severely polluted . |
29 | Some improvement might be effected in these situations if the critical jobs to be carried on , in the event of illness , could be identified and training provided for those likely to be left to carry on . |
30 | These were arranged to allow the morning feeding to be carried out and a one-and-a-half hour break for tea allowed many farmers to return for the second feed and to check the stock . |