Example sentences of "[vb mod] [adv] be fully [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The Exquisite Fairy Wrasse possesses a beauty which may only be fully appreciated in the living fish .
2 But women tend to work by manipulating the threads , setting up a pattern to be woven , which may not be fully revealed until much later .
3 However , studies of children 's communicative abilities prior to the onset of spoken language have indicated that the origins of communication may be traced back to the earliest days after birth , and that full mastery of the morpho-syntactic devices for expressing complex meanings may not be fully understood until early adolescence .
4 What is more , at least some of the extras that typically appear at funerals may not be fully covered in the plans available .
5 Development of the avionics system for the bat-shaped B-2 bomber is at least two years behind schedule and the system may not be fully developed by the time the aircraft is to be deployed in the middle of the next decade .
6 These risks may not be fully appreciated by private investors and SFA Rules therefore require appropriate warnings to be given to such investors of the risks concerned .
7 The British squad members may not be fully rested after their return yesterday from a 2½-week training trip to the United States , but their presence will serve as a psychological boost to their teams .
8 ( It had been the practice for the climber to go to the top and give the fox a spin , but in 1984 the committee got cold feet when it found they might not be fully insured for the climber and a separate insurance would cost too much .
9 I can say only that when I was at Bletchley the belief among my associates was that information had been received and that Ultra did not fail ; the intelligence it provided could not be fully acted upon for fear of betraying Ultra itself .
10 Specialisation : children , neighbours , friends and other relatives performed different if overlapping roles which could not be fully substituted for each other .
11 But it is of concern and I do hope that in the next forthcoming er house er when the the house sits in the forthcoming rounds , that they will be mindful of the representations which have been made nationally and that the Police service and the proposals contained , particularly in the Police bill , will not be fully implemented in the way that they 're currently proposed on the white paper today .
12 Even so , the effects of these cuts will not be fully felt until financial year 1994/95 , and some further reduction in our book-buying and binding will still be necessary this year .
13 This will help as part of the socialization process , but do bear in mind that you will not be able to allow it to scamper about at the end of the journey until you return home , because it will not be fully protected at this stage .
14 The cause of the plane crash in the outer Hebrides yesterday which killed the ten-man crew of and R A F Shackleton aircraft , may never be fully known for the plane is too old to be fitted with a black box flight recorder .
15 The impact of the Thatcher years can only be fully assessed in the future .
16 The reason why I run culture and ideology together to identify the institutionalization of consumerism is that consumerism in the global system can only be fully understood as a cultural-ideological practice .
17 The movies were something very new and they soon developed a unique and distinctive position within the culture but that position can only be fully understood by reference to that context of nineteenth-century popular culture from which they emerged .
18 Within such a context it is easier to see how a series of advances , retreats and confusing divisions can be explained as part of a general shift which is of wider significance than the accumulation of a mass of detailed incidents , each of which can only be fully explained in terms of its own unique genesis .
19 Tragedy can only be fully explained in such terms .
20 These underlying questions can only be fully studied in a situation where the curriculum is of the type recommended by Cockcroft , and a graduated assessment scheme is in operation .
21 The machinery they use , their cars , their clothes , the tourists they encounter , the music they hear , all summon up the idea of a new , modern , ‘ front ’ region : one which can only be fully appreciated by actually moving and becoming part of it .
22 Projects based on religion , morals , the nature of the self and so forth can not be fully incorporated within this framework .
23 The degree of discrimination against disabled people working in the health and caring professions can not be fully answered by this research .
24 However , the wide fluctuations in the performance of individual local education authorities can not be fully explained by variations in social and economic circumstances or by variations in spending on education , and show that there is plenty of scope to improve standards .
25 The Nuclear Free Zone Treaty is open only to South Pacific Forum States , but its objectives can not be fully achieved without some commitments from third parties .
26 For instance , Susan Trangmar 's slide installation can not be fully seen from the margins , but the act of walking to the centre of the four projector installation involves passing one of the projectors so that your shadow passes across the image .
27 The criticisms of both marginality and the Turner thesis have suggested that the problems of spontaneous housing can not be fully understood without some reference to the wider society .
28 The present nature of housing can not be fully understood without relating it to the nature of domestic labour .
29 If we return to the example , we can see that clause ( 2 ) , having failed to disprove the charges , can not be fully understood in version ( a ) until clause ( 3 ) has also been heard .
30 Secondly , as a matter of fact , it is accepted in many areas of the higher education curriculum that the basic conceptual understanding can not be fully accomplished at the undergraduate stage , in which case the ‘ frontiers of knowledge ’ can be shown only to students who follow on to a postgraduate programme .
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