Example sentences of "always to [be] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 Public parks came in the 1840s , and public libraries a few years later ; later still perhaps the grandiose Town Hall , by no means always to be despised as architecture .
2 Terms are used , like chicks , broads , birds , dolls , slags and tarts which mean that women are never simply ‘ women ’ but always to be defined according to their sexual appearance and their sexual availability .
3 They have always to be referred to pedagogic decision .
4 Shooting a known man-eater used always to be done by attracting it to fresh meat , until it was discovered that a ripe durian is a much stronger lure .
5 It was the sun 's messenger and therefore acted as a herald of peace and prosperity , always to be seen flying overhead when a new Emperor ascended the throne .
6 But female psychologists are much more likely than male psychologists always to be seen as some male psychologist 's prize student .
7 His diminutive figure was always to be seen during battles with the opposition , and for this reason he gained exceptionally early admission to the Rowdies as a kind of unofficial mascot .
8 There are certain bars where artists and writers are always to be seen , talking animatedly as they set the world to rights .
9 He was remembered as ‘ a little , active man , always to be seen carrying plans under his arm ’ .
10 In times when there is occasion for rejoicing as , for example , in the gathering of a successful harvest , a happy emergence from trouble or natural disaster and on many other occasions there is always to be observed an urge to offer thanks to someone or something .
11 Marriage had always to be delayed until a suitable standing was achieved among middle-class and respectable poor ( Macfarlane 1986 ) .
12 Dr Lee 's Professorship is likely , in future , always to be filled by an experimentalist .
13 My message therefore , boring but always to be heeded , is ‘ watch your credit control , say NO more often , ask for increased payments more often , use the reference bureaux more often , if in doubt say no — cash in the company is better than a lazy or non repaying loan . '
14 Figure 9–3(b) illustrates the special ease where A and B have identical utility functions or , alternatively , where it is accepted that A and B ought always to be treated as if they had identical utility functions .
15 For example , foot , took , shook , look have all been attested as alternating between [ ? ] and [ ü ] , while soot , cook , book , hook seem always to be pronounced with [ ü ] .
16 I shall expect you always to be dressed by dinner time and whomsoever I bring home to my table you 'll be in readiness to receive .
17 All we in fact observe is that h is regularly followed by B. This consistent association leads us to connect the two in our own minds , to expect A always to be followed by B , and this we then express by saying that A is the cause of B and B the effect of A. This is all perfectly in order , and indeed it is through such links and associations that we build up an ordered and coherent conception of the world around us and make sense of our experience of it .
18 This leads to the distinction between the error ( always to be rejected ) and the one who errs ( always to be respected ) , and the idea that even ‘ erroneous ’ systems can have ‘ good and commendable elements ’ ( 159 ) .
19 A great deal of inadequate and over-crowded housing has been removed , not always to be replaced by high-rise developments .
20 It could be argued , therefore , that good education ought always to be based on multi-cultural principles .
21 It is always to be hoped that this charism will be active in popes and bishops , but it is not , nor can it be , reduced solely to their authority .
22 No solution was found : within a few years the European powers were at war again , essentially over the question whether Spain and her colonies were going to pass into the hands of a relation of the King of France or a relation of the Holy Roman Emperor ; in the end they passed into the French line of descent , and in the eighteenth century policy towards France had always to be conducted in the light of the possibility that the French and Spanish government might ally for war .
23 This argument could be regarded as a rebuttable presumption , but then the inexorable logic of the theory breaks down ; it could not be said that legal rules were always to be determined by the ordinary courts .
24 The British tabloids , always to be relied on to turn a mild comment into a raging scandal , did just that , hilariously suggesting that The Smiths , as always , led by manic vegetarian Morrissey , were inciting the nation 's kids to go shoplifting .
25 Freud replies to his own argument , that there is no need for man always to be ruled by emotions .
26 He constantly affirms the effectiveness of order embodied in details such as dress , body movement and manners , and argues that it is a function of the mundane artefact almost always to be regarded as an example of mere ‘ trivia ’ unworthy of systematic academic study .
27 A term is always to be regarded as not individually negotiated where it has been drafted in advance and the consumer has therefore not been able to influence the substance of the term , particularly in the context of a pre-formulated standard contract .
28 They are , however , based around a concept of object relations which asserts that the external forms which are the subject of these mechanisms are always to be understood also as projections .
29 The basic mechanisms which utilize splitting are therefore always to be understood as a division in the subject as well as the object .
30 His old friend , the abbot of St Peter 's Abbey in Salzburg , noted that Leopold had been a man of ‘ much wit and wisdom ’ , whose talents went far beyond those of music alone , yet he had ‘ had the misfortune always to be persecuted ’ and was consequently held in less esteem in Salzburg than elsewhere in Europe .
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