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

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1 In view of the embargo on the employment of Indian troops to suppress Burmese nationalism , the Acting Supreme Commander South-East Asia informed the Chiefs of Staff that substantial British reinforcements must be despatched from Malaya , weakening the position in that territory whose rubber was much more important to Britain than Burma 's rice : and incidentally delaying the troops ' repatriation and demobilisation , a politically sensitive issue .
2 No one must ever ask where another rabbit was and anyone who asked , " Where ? " — except in a song or a poem — must be silenced .
3 In Britain also , there is recognition that the progress that has been made in the last fifteen years in increasing the pool of professionally-trained social workers must be matched by similar efforts to upgrade the skills of the paraprofessional work force if the quality of social service provision is to be adequate .
4 The information must be matched to the business 's objectives and critical success factors .
5 Your impressive track record on paper must be matched by your ability to talk about it , otherwise you will lose credibility .
6 Effective computer support must be matched to human thinking so that communication is readily established and yet different in providing functions which supplement human thinking ( p. 233 ) .
7 Clearly the diversity of their experiences and needs and the significance of age and gender in defining the trajectory of drugs careers must be matched by flexible counselling and treatment .
8 The move back to full employment , an integral part of the reform being advocated here , will itself have an indirect effect on wage levels , particularly for those at the bottom end of the income pile , although it can not be stressed enough that the drive towards full employment must be matched by a commitment to improve the productivity of all workers — including those on low pay .
9 This must be matched by greater resources for research and development in this area .
10 A manager 's concern for people must be matched by his concern for achieving results .
11 Any change in public deposits must be matched by an equal and opposite change in bankers ' deposits , from which still further consequences may follow .
12 If we assume that this ratio is stable and repeat our earlier point that banks will normally be looking to expand their lending as a source of profit , then it follows fairly obviously that a change in the availability of base money to banks must be matched by a change in the size of the total balance sheet and that this latter change must be some multiple of the change in the size of the base .
13 Hans Tietmayer , then Deputy President Elect of the Bundesbank , put it this way as early as June 1991 : ‘ A single currency requires a single bank which must be matched by a single government and a single state . ’
14 A central issue would be the implications of the expected decline of oil production , which must be matched by the rise of some alternative source of export earnings or import savings .
15 Restructuring must coincide with the broader Community objectives , and Community funds must be matched by national funds .
16 ALTHOUGH several national charities have pledged money to build the centre their promises must be matched from within Darlington .
17 ‘ If we are going to build the best stadium in England , it must be matched by the team .
18 If there is a deficit on the current account , i.e. if we import more goods and services than we export , this deficit must be matched by a surplus on the capital account to make the account balance .
19 The dominance of the dominant mode must be legitimated .
20 The choice theory picks up the libertarian strand , which insists that all state power must be legitimated by consent , whereas the ‘ harm to interests ’ theory taps the slender source of Millian liberalism to defend a broadening of the scope of contractual obligations .
21 In contrast to tradition 's ‘ universe of doxa ’ stands modernity 's ‘ universe of discourse ’ which presupposes that ideas must be legitimated in order to achieve hegemony , and hence presumes a certain autonomy of ideas from power relations .
22 The ears must be hollowed out and round shallow recesses cut , in which the glass eyes will later be set with woodfiller .
23 Conditions to be met are that the employee must be enrolled for at least one academic year with actual full-time attendance to average at least 20 weeks a year , and the rate of payments ( excluding university fees etc payable ) must not exceed £7,000 a year or the equivalent monthly or weekly rate .
24 Passion must be tempered with reason .
25 However , legitimate concern about improvement must be tempered by the countless instances when communication certainly is effective .
26 But any suggestion of confidence in the players ' ability to perform on the field must be tempered by worries over their ability to handle life off it .
27 The termini post quos of these finds could be tabulated with the diagnostic contents of each context , but the value of such an exercise must be tempered by the fundamental problem of the chronological association of the coins and the other artefacts and their respective use-life .
28 Gratitude for the invitation to pay a brief tribute to Jim Byam Shaw on his retirement from active participation in the affairs of his famous firm must be tempered for an old friend by reflection on the difficulties that any such tribute involves .
29 Our holism must be tempered , then , by respect for the needs of the language-learner .
30 This means that any examination of the details of its terms must be tempered by a consideration of whether or how they might be brought into operation .
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