Example sentences of "of [noun pl] that be [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Laing fills the void left by Marty Strutt 's return to Bangor while Robson is given his chance ahead of a bevy of scrum-halves that are on the Shane Park books .
2 It is often possible to effect change by apparently recommending the continuation or intensification of interactions that are at the root of family problems .
3 FRED 1 did not address the making of provisions in respect of operations that are to be discontinued in future periods .
4 This kind of administrative structure may be regarded as likely to lead to the implementation of policies that are at variance with those favoured by elected local councils .
5 Yeah but look at , the amount of houses that are for sale .
6 Every breed has its own society and these usually keep lists of ponies that are for sale from their breeders .
7 In her private life material from conference lectures is combined with the pop-culture mythology of advertisements , phrase-book dialogues , and other public texts in a number of languages to generate a network of images that is in turn linked to semi-conscious obsessions and childhood memories .
8 This was concealed up to now by a few intuitive master strokes , the lucky results of risks that were in themselves unjustified , and the short-comings of our enemies .
9 It is this latter set of words that is of semantic interest , as it is they that ’ seem to contain more meaning ’ [ Bolinger & sears , 1981 ]
10 Both sets of players were on the receiving end of tackles that were near the knuckle . ’
11 But best of all , ‘ Up ’ is full of songs that are about the daftness and power of love , bizarrely enough .
12 As mentioned previously , the Longman Corpus consists of superfields that are in turn subdivided into subfields .
13 Though matte painting was and is favoured largely for economy — it reduces travel or set building or both — handcrafted painting is at times capable of effects that are beyond photography in terms of atmosphere , imagination and invention .
14 Members of the European Parliament receive warning of matters that are to be discussed by the Commission and by the various pillars and councils that have been established by the treaty .
15 Photographs and illustrations Wherever possible , include a picture of the building or group of buildings that are at risk .
16 This relates to a more basic question concerning the sorts of explanations that are to be given of the cross-national variations that are discovered .
17 These books speak of betrayal — of betrayal of the ideals of a public library system , of the system of higher education and the education of our teachers , and , at the highest level , of gifts and endowments and the historical integrity of collections that were at the heart of the country 's literary culture .
18 Characteristics of thesauri that are of wider interest are :
19 The Commission proposed a long-term programme to evaluate the environmental risks of substances that were in use before 1981 when EC legislation ruled that all new chemicals should undergo ecotoxicological evaluation before being licensed for marketing .
20 It is probable , however , that this was an exception rather than the rule — most deaf people before the start of deaf education did not marry , and those that did , like Sir John Gawdy , Sir Edward Gostwicke and Alexander Popham , all came from wealthy families where there was a desire to continue the family line and marriages were made with daughters of families that were of the landed gentry .
21 However , they will be drawn from the same list of topics that 're on the first and there may be some overlap .
22 This definition includes a number of assumptions that are worth expansion .
23 However , the principles are the same regardless of the extent that MINSE is applied , and only the purpose of the investigation will determine the depth of analysis needed and the amount of resources that are worth employing .
24 The hallmark of economic analysis is how to make best ( ‘ efficient ’ ) use of resources that are in scarce supply .
25 Understanding in this sense means being able to perceive structure amongst a set of observations that were at first sight perplexing and confusing .
26 Surely ( so the argument might be continued ) the interesting cases of knowledge are those which permit meaningful questions about criteria , and such cases necessarily involve states of affairs that are in some sense publicly accessible .
27 Because there 's , there 's usually somebody working in every section just to keep a wee turnover of things that 's in a hurry
28 It costs eighty five p , and you can get it from any of the H M S O — Her Majesty 's Stationery Office — or you could order it , I should think , from most bookshops , and that 'll give you a pretty good overview of what Warnock is trying to do , and then , of course if anybody 's interested enough in comparing that with the Act , you 'll see the kind of things that were in the Warnock Report have n't actually come through in the act .
29 While no formal admission of liability had been made by the health board , it was the amount of damages that was in dispute .
30 In that case , it is their memory and not the College of Arms that is off the mark !
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