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

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31 The patient may be referred to such agencies either during or at the end of treatment .
32 You may be referred to a hospital specialist .
33 As Figures 7.4 and 7.5 show , these may be referred to as Car Ways , Access Ways , Mews Courts , or Housing Squares depending upon design and capacity .
34 Someone may be referred to as mulish , a vixen , a shrew , dogged , cowed .
35 What may be referred to as ‘ presence ’ is just as important as excellent paper qualifications .
36 13.2.3 Subject as aforesaid , any refusal or unreasonable delay ( including but not by way of limitation , any delay beyond the date specified in the request ) in granting such consent may be referred to the Project Committee .
37 A list of insolvency practitioners ( ie solicitors with special expertise in the field of insolvency and approved as such ) may be referred to at the Law Society 's Hall , 113 Chancery Lane , London WC2A 1PL ( Tel : 01–242 1222 ) .
38 Unfortunately there is confusion in the literature and the required procedures may be referred to as either skills analysis or task analysis ( Seymour 1968 , Singer and Ramsden 1969 , Miller 1962 ) .
39 In the event that you have a dispute with us which we can not amicably resolve is you so wish the dispute may be referred to Arbitration under a special scheme which though devised by arrangement with ABTA is administered quite independently by the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators .
40 If , however , we are unable to resolve any dispute arising out of a complaint than the complaint may be referred to Arbitration under a special scheme devised by arrangement with the Association of British Travel Agents but administered independently by the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators .
41 These may be referred to as paradigmatic or conceptual collocates [ Smadja , 1989 ] , and are characterised by an equal distribution of one term about the other within a given context ( e.g. ’ mortgage ’ & ’ property ’ can occur anywhere within the same sentence in relation to each other ) .
42 Bills relating to Scotland alone may be referred to the Scottish Grand Committee unless ten members object .
43 This may be because the complaint has political overtones ; ( b ) the authority can call in any complaint it wishes to supervise ; ( c ) any matter not subject to a complaint may be referred to the authority who may investigate it .
44 One additional feature of the responses to tasks exemplifying this criterion is that many pupils refer to 3-D shapes by the names of their faces , i.e. " a cube " may be referred to as " a square " , or a pyramid as a " triangle " .
45 Those sending in inadequate documentation may be referred to a solicitor on the Interview Panel before the matter proceeds further .
46 In other organizations this model may be referred to as ‘ The New Ideas Process ’ , ‘ Aviary ’ , ‘ Discovery ’ , ‘ The Innovation Network ’ and the like .
47 Moreover , issues of law may be referred to the visitor which are wholly analogous to questions decided by the courts .
48 Textbooks should be quoted only if they express an individual opinion , and the lecturer ( qua lecturer ) not at all , When quoting authors , if the author is dead he may be referred to by his surname only , but if he is still with us it is polite to give him a handle — Sir or Prof. or Dr or Mr. As regards judges the customary J. , etc. , should be used irrespective of whether they are alive or dead .
49 They are covered by the Fair Trading Act 1973 ( FTA ) , under which mergers involving the takeover of assets worth ( currently ) £30m or more may be referred to the Monopolies and Mergers Commission ( MMC ) .
50 A committee may be referred to in this type of instance as a plural executive .
51 The subject matter of this chapter is covered fairly fully in the author 's earlier book ( Arridge 1975 ) while Ferry ( 1980 ) may be referred to for the most comprehensive account .
52 The technique of back chaining may be referred to in the teaching of intonation .
53 And if you , you go and see a G P at the end of the financial year or at the wrong part of the financial year , then you may be referred to somewhere strictly because that 's all the G P can , can afford to send you .
54 The third task mentioned may be referred to as information management .
55 These fast update mechanisms may be referred to as the hold and terminate facilities and they have an important role in eliminating the drudgery of recruitment administration .
56 Your query may be referred to a specialist SCOTVEC officer or it might be suggested that an external verifier should visit you .
57 Questions may be referred to the Bank 's Sanctions Emergency Unit :
58 I must announce to the House that I have not selected either of the amendments on the Order Paper , but they may be referred to during the debate .
59 The countries may be referred to as zones or polygons .
60 This may be quite legitimate in cases where it is possible to use one module with any one or more modules , all of which may be referred to in loose coupling relations but only one may need to be called up from within the package .
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