Example sentences of "mean [conj] [ex0] must be " in BNC.

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1 She could still see , dimly , which meant that there must be a light source somewhere near .
2 That means that there must be some slack in the system , and the government will ensure that this is so by continuing to cash limit the NHS in total .
3 First , it means that there must be some form of cost/benefit analysis , however distasteful it is to assign money values to life or ill-health .
4 ‘ owing to the presence of which ’ This point means that there must be a direct connection between the motor vehicle and the occurrence of the accident : Quelch v Phipps [ 1955 ] 2 A11 ER 302 .
5 However , this means that there must be feedback from output markets to R&D laboratories , since output markets are the main source of information about costs and demand .
6 It means that there must be constant vigilance by the authorities ; it means that there must be methods of responding swiftly to alarm bells that may be rung either by staff or by children and that there must be alarm bells that can , in real life , be rung .
7 It means that there must be constant vigilance by the authorities ; it means that there must be methods of responding swiftly to alarm bells that may be rung either by staff or by children and that there must be alarm bells that can , in real life , be rung .
8 Convention be interpreted as meaning that there must be a connection between the actions against the various defendants ? ( b ) If question ( a ) must be answered in the affirmative , does the necessary connection between the actions against the various defendants exist if the actions are essentially the same in fact and law ( einfache Streitgenossenschaft ) , or must a connection be assumed to exist only if it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings ( for example , in cases of ‘ notwengide Streitgenossenschaft ’ ( compulsory joinder ) ) ?
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