Example sentences of "that be [adv] [vb pp] [conj] " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 On the other hand there are many decisions that are never made because the decider can not figure out how to implement the decision at the very first stage .
32 I have a pair of brown suede brogues that are really worn and I prefer them in their frazzled state !
33 It has saved billions of pounds by writing reports that are always respected and independent , and which suggest ways in which local government — and , now , the health service — can get better value for money .
34 There is no doubt generally that children love jokes and riddles that are predictably structured and heavily formulaic , whatever the fashionable subject-matter .
35 Outside these two regions LASMO is concentrating its efforts on proven hydrocarbon bearing areas that are relatively under-explored but have the potential for further discoveries which are significant to the Group at minimum exploration risk .
36 Many are ‘ blatant untruths ’ that are only revealed when potential buyers visit a house .
37 What Charles craved was a return to classical architecture , to buildings that were sympathetic to their surroundings , that were well proportioned and sensitive to human feelings , and not purely functional .
38 I I think these are fellows that were either killed or died on active service .
39 The other Met girls , Sheila , Marjorie , Babs , Dora and Jean were all very easy to get on with , and the Met Office was custom built for the job , with benches that were properly lit and stools the right height for us to work from .
40 ‘ Care ’ , particularly by that route , threatened to rupture relationships that were already strained and fragile .
41 There were also occasions when trains were run from stations that were already closed but could be brought into operation for special purposes such as excursions , et for Wakes Weeks in Lancashire and the Potteries .
42 Sadly , it was not only their wilder impulses that were sternly checked but , all too often , ( as clinical psychologist Allan Fromme puts it ) , their ‘ creative imagination , curiosity , intellectual expressiveness , and capacity for enjoyment ’ .
43 Sounds as if the guy is suffering from Hemingway Syndrome : ‘ computers may see their silicon lives flash before their eyes , so to speak , just before they die , ’ Prodigy Services Co suggests , reporting that physicist Stephen Thaler of McDonnell Douglas Corp has been playing with neural networks as a way to speed diamond crystal growth but while by day , he created and trained the neural nets , by night , he began annihilating them to see what would happen , randomly severing links , and when between 10% and 60% of the links were destroyed , the network regurgitated nonsense , but as it approached death , 90% of the connections severed , it generated distinct values that had been trained into it , and at times even output ‘ whimsical ’ states , where it would generate values that were neither trained nor ones that would appear in a healthy net , says Thaler , who thinks it may say something about near-death experiences for humans — ‘ It may not just be fancy biochemistry , ’ he suggests .
44 She left him to prowl restlessly through the family photographs that were prominently displayed as she first took a shower then dithered over what to wear .
45 This probably reflects the fact that all such work tended to attract men from similar areas — those that were conveniently situated or with low levels of local employment .
46 Miss Grimsilk had a clean good skin , clean good hair of an indeterminate brown , used no make-up and wore trousers and jacket that were excellently cut and of clean good British wool , but of a miserable dirty slate-grey colour .
47 At the airport , he replied to interviewers with words that were memorably misreported as being : ‘ Crisis — what crisis ? ’
48 Of the courses that were specifically described as management training , 67% of them were carried out by libraries who expected an above average number of programmes for the coming year , who themselves comprised 27% of the sample .
49 Observing in the classroom , we have been very encouraged to see that many programs that were originally designed and written to be used with a whole class ( maybe as many as 30 pupils participating ) are very effective with groups of pupils working on their own , either with the same approach taken with the whole class or with a subset of the possible activities offered by the program being tackled ( eg , PIRATES , JANEPLUS and TRANSPOTS ) .
50 And the slides that were then machined and put into it so that the , the , the , the arm of the , the stabilizer could slip into the water you know .
51 Hands that were quickly withdrawn when the need for them was over .
52 On the other hand , the audience for the images that were sometimes drawn and painted inside such books — portraits of the evangelists , for instance , or ( like the picture on the cover of this book ) of a royal patron — must have been very restricted .
53 There are , of course , countless buildings that were purposely designed as pubs , yet many more occupy buildings intended for some other , usually domestic , use .
54 Scarman identified two views that were commonly held as to the causation of the disorders .
55 Loess is a clay that is easily cut and holds its shape ; it can be incredibly accommodating as a building material .
56 This is a problem that is easily overlooked when viewing a property , and can be a genuine problem in the future .
57 5.20 Keyholders To ensure that at all times the Landlord has [ and the local Police force has ] written notice of the name home address and home telephone number of at least [ 2 ] key holder[s] of the Premises While this is not necessarily objectionable it is a provision that is easily overlooked and imposes an obligation on the tenant which may not be appropriate in the circumstances .
58 LTP is q phenomenon that is easily produced and manipulated by classical neurophysiological techniques , so its popularity as a potential memory model is scarcely surprising .
59 It is extremely important that you have an organisation structure that is clearly understood and then you should not keep altering it .
60 The main contribution of CLE-I is substantial coverage of English constructions in both syntax and semantics that is well motivated and hence extensible ; in contrast to SPAR , it was not built mainly with anaphor resolution in mind .
  Previous page   Next page