Example sentences of "[be] expected to [be] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | This financial year , they are expected to be just over £1 billion — about one half of 1 per cent . |
2 | In future , the primary rental will be abolished , and the new costs of maintaining their own transmission systems plus paying for the licence are expected to be considerably less expensive . |
3 | Versions for Italy and the Benelux countries are expected to be ready later in the second quarter and a Spanish version in the last half of 1993 , the company said . |
4 | With so much pollution flowing down the Taff and Ely rivers , there is little or no prospect of the 600-acre lake being used for contact water sports — the health risks are expected to be far too high . |
5 | And we can not help but contrast the generous appreciation of Dryden by Eliot , who might have been expected to be temperamentally less in tune with him . |
6 | The fact that there is a difference comes as no surprise , after all , a completely empty , uneventful drive through a junction would be expected to be both less memorable and less risky than an occasion when the junction was full of traffic . |
7 | Growing in excess of 400mm , Synodontis schall can be expected to be quite long lived , provided it is well cared for in the aquarium . |
8 | Nevertheless , the total number of items is expected to be well over 20,000 . |
9 | ‘ Detective Eddy has received word from London that someone he wants to see is expected to be here today . |
10 | ( In the year 2000 the number of homes with either cable or satellite is expected to be just over 10 million . ) |
11 | That is expected to be in about four to six years . |
12 | Therefore the proportion of households headed by a married couple has been decreasing through time — it was 74 per cent in 1971 , 70 per cent in 1981 , and is expected to be only about 55 per cent in 2001 in England and Wales ( Department of the Environment , 1986a ) . |
13 | NI benefits are expected to be a target for cost cutting but the review is expected to be very wide ranging . |
14 | Although not all newspapers were affected to the same degree , the trend towards more ‘ sensation ’ and more ‘ sport ’ suggested that the ‘ reader was expected to be intellectually more passive … attracted less by the prospect of greater wisdom than by that of ‘ Elevated ’ status , and he was now appealed to in a shrill capitalised format ’ . |