Example sentences of "they [vb mod] [verb] [prep] [be] " in BNC.
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31 | Maureen O'Hara , of the Children 's Legal Centre , said : ‘ Local authorities have to accept that if they 've made every effort to keep children at home with the non-abusing parent and it does n't work , they may have to be taken into care . ’ |
32 | Indeed , they may have to be manufactured to exact customer specifications . |
33 | We 're going to try some further measures to get the temperature down and they may have to be a little drastic . ’ |
34 | In the circumstances they may have to be melted down . ’ |
35 | Three gypsies were arrested but the police admit they may have to be released without charge , because no one who was injured is prepared to make a complaint . |
36 | " If long putters enable more people to play without jeopardising the integrity of the game , we think they ought to continue to be used , " Bloch said . |
37 | The level of demand is to do not only with the tasks as they are done but also with the duration for which they must continue to be done . |
38 | The moral decline of the West cries out for a return to the morals of protestant Christianity which will tell the nation what they must do to be strong once more . |
39 | One can understand why people at risk should wish to have these things , but not why they should expect to be given them free . |
40 | For this reason I have been convinced for some months that interest rates are too high and that they should start to be reduced at once . |
41 | Aunt M. nags and nags , and Uncle John said outright that he did n't see why they should have to be responsible for me , when Mother was only half-sister to Aunt Millicent . |
42 | They ask for advice when they should try to be more aware of what is happening . ’ |
43 | I 'm sure they 'll want to be with us . |
44 | ‘ They 'll want to be held up . |
45 | In the mild south , gardeners can get away with plunging them in their containers buried in peat in the garden , but up here they 'll need to be kept safe from hard frost in a cold frame . |
46 | ‘ They 'll need to be ploughed and planted with a root crop for the first year . |
47 | They 'll have to be rescued . |
48 | I 'll need dog-handlers immediately and they 'll have to be sent out to Pontino , there 's no need for them to check in here first — the girl they released is in shock . |
49 | If the players really impress you with their heckling and barracking of the puppets ( and they 'll have to be witty as well as abusive ) , the puppets will eventually break off their performance , perhaps concluding with an important tip about a major location within the dungeons ( if the players did exceptionally well ) . |
50 | ‘ And they 'll be slowed down because they 'll have to be discreet . |
51 | ‘ They 'll have to be bandaged , ’ Tulagai said . |
52 | Thing is , they 'll have to be redone , and quite sharpish . |
53 | Then the kids will get worse problems and go bad sure as sure , and they 'll have to be rehoused and in the end they 'll cost ten times as much . |
54 | There may be points of dispute in which case they 'll have to be settled in court . ’ |
55 | Well they 'll have to be equal prizes would n't they ? |
56 | No those 15 trucks and trailers will move from Assab to Desai and they should arrive in Dessi this morning , and then in Desai they 'll have to be transferred to er a certain amount of food to smaller trucks , and we think that the first group of trucks will be just perhaps 5 trucks that will really test the road from Desai up to Waldia in the area controlled by the rebels to see if there really is a safe passage agreement and to see if er there are bridges out on that road or whether there are land mines left on the road , to see if it is actually possible to move food across those lines . |
57 | There were a lot of young drunks staggering about , too — most at that noisy and unattractive stage where they might want to be your pal or pick a fight or just throw up on you , so I gave them a wide berth . |
58 | In these ways , our relationship with others grows and deepens , freeing them to be in Christ as they might long to be . |
59 | There is nothing essentially new in thus narrowing the scope of will ; most of mankind throughout most of its history seems to have taken it for granted that they were moved by forces from beyond them and mysterious to them , which might lift them above or drag them below the capacities of which they might presume to be in command ( in Christian theology , the unpredictable visitations of divine grace assisting a will otherwise impotent to resist the Devil ) , and in the present century , ever since Freud demonstrated that the same conception of man could be translated from a religious into a psychological language , we have found ourselves thinking our way back to it . |
60 | They might prefer to be irresistibly appealing in the nude , so would we all , but that ca n't always be the case . |