Example sentences of "child be be " in BNC.
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1 | That is where your wife and child are being held , so it will shorten the lines of communication . |
2 | He had complained about the way a mother and her child were being treated at Harmondsworth . |
3 | He thought that preferable to the child 's being in an institution or with foster parents . |
4 | The reply by the minister was a direct echo of Mary Carpenter : ‘ The principle behind this provision in the bill is that parents should be required — if their means so permit — to pay for their child 's board and lodging , so that they are in no way better off as a result of the child 's being in care . ’ |
5 | Primary cases involve any allegation that a child is being physically or sexually abused , neglected , is failing to thrive , is left alone , or is severely at risk of being abused . |
6 | Yet this is how crying in infants is sometimes interpreted : the child is being naughty ; naughtiness is punished ; smacking is how I was punished as a child ; so I smack my baby . |
7 | I have found it useful , when a child is being a thorough nuisance , making exasperating demands , to say to myself : ‘ He/she is not trying to be a ‘ problem ’ ; he/she is trying to solve a problem . |
8 | when your child is being downright defiant to you ( e.g. saying ; ‘ I wo n't ’ , ‘ Do it yourself ’ , etc . ) . |
9 | It is extremely difficult for any practitioner to administer a test in exactly the same way on two occasions , even if the same child is being tested . |
10 | Where the child is being praised for new behaviour it should be rewarded immediately . |
11 | The fact that at times the child seems well able to respond to them reinforces their view that their child is being naughty . |
12 | Social workers have a key role to play when someone suspects that a child is being abused . |
13 | My youngest child is being bullied at school and I want to send her to St Saviour 's . |
14 | ‘ Where the person applying for leave to make an application for a section 8 order is not the child concerned , the court shall , in deciding whether or not to grant leave , have particular regard to — ( a ) the nature of the proposed application for the section 8 order ; ( b ) the applicant 's connection with the child ; ( c ) any risk there might be of that proposed application disrupting the child 's life to such an extent that he would be harmed by it ; and ( d ) where the child is being looked after by a local authority — ( i ) the authority 's plans for the child 's future ; and ( ii ) the wishes and feelings of the child 's parents . |
15 | Part Four examines the respective rights , duties and responsibilities of the local authority , parent and child when a child is being looked after by a local authority . |
16 | If , for example , a client discloses to a solicitor , in confidence , the fact that a child is being abused by another person , this information can only be passed on if the public interest in protecting children from serious harm outweighs the public interest in maintaining confidentiality between solicitor and client . |
17 | In deciding whether to grant leave the court must have regard to : ( i ) the nature of the proposed application ; ( ii ) the applicant 's connection with the child ; ( iii ) the risk of harmful disruption to the child 's life ; and ( iv ) where the child is being looked after by a local authority , the authority 's plans for the child 's future and the wishes and feelings of the parents ( s10(9) ) . |
18 | The child is being cared for by foster parents in Scotland until his fate is decided . |
19 | He is suffering from the consequences of this accident and reproaches himself for the distress the family of the child is being put through . |
20 | But if it 's done as a way of accelerating the child 's development , in order , as it were , to give it the edge over its peers , that does n't seem to me to suggest a relationship in which parent and child are enjoying each other ; it is much more a relationship in which the child is being prepared for competition with its peers and this , I feel , probably is going to turn out badly , because almost inevitably the child will not reach the levels that the parent has build up in fantasy in its own mind . |
21 | But if it 's done as a way of accelerating the child 's development , in order , as it were , to give it the edge over its peers , that does n't seem to me to suggest a relationship in which parent and child are enjoying each other ; it is much more a relationship in which the child is being prepared for competition with its peers and this , I feel , probably is going to turn out badly , because almost inevitably the child will not reach the levels that the parent has build up in fantasy in its own mind . |
22 | It may be that er a child is being ill-treated in some way er by somebody , and we can help to decide what to do about that . |
23 | I erm actually went back to the room to see erm what condition or what the child was was doing there . |
24 | Nor does it get us anywhere to learn from Anna Dostoevsky 's Memoirs that the story of the frantic Shatov , where phrasing seems inevitable and images unsought — it does n't help to be told by the novelist 's widow that these flawless pages lean heavily on his own behaviour while their first child was being born . |
25 | One child was being tutored at home , and they were all fine . |
26 | Wahler and Dumas ( 1986 ) found that ‘ insular ’ mothers were more angry and irritable than non-insular mothers towards their children , whether the child was being naughty or good . |
27 | In short , in deciding whether or not a child was being abused ( and what course of practical action to take ) , social workers were not simply relying on clinical and other sources of more objective evidence , but were being asked to make value judgements about the kinds of situations in which child abuse is most likely to occur , and the ‘ types ’ of people most likely to engage in it . |
28 | Resentment was always present when parents felt either that there was a lack of openness or frankness on the part of the professionals or administrators , or that they were being coerced , or that their concern for and about their child was being called into question . |
29 | New children are being put at risk every day because many care workers still do not know how to protect people from HIV . |
30 | ‘ A high and rising proportion of children are being born to mothers least fitted to bring children into the world … |