Example sentences of "[noun sg] that [modal v] [verb] to be " in BNC.

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1 In today 's European capital markets , the freedom of exchange rates , to which some of my hon. Friends are so attached , means only the freedom to devalue — a course of action that would prove to be as futile as it is nugatory in modern conditions .
2 I can certainly give my hon. Friend an assurance that , were the investigations by the Serious Fraud Office to produce evidence of fraud that would have to be considered by those involved in criminal prosecutions of if there were claims that the Occupational Pensions Board had been negligent or in any other way culpable of failure to carry out its duties as imposed by the law , those matters would be considered with great care .
3 In detail , will the Minister give the capital debt figure that will have to be shouldered by these three hospitals ?
4 After primary school , the encouragement of the imagination in children , and the cultivation of specifically creative activities , has often been thought an optional part of the curriculum , a luxury that may have to be dispensed with , left in , if at all , for the less able pupils deemed incapable of serious learning or for that minority determined to reject ‘ scientific ’ understanding .
5 The French Open champion has ‘ a serious condition that will have to be taken care of in a substantial way , ’ said her agent , Phil de Picciotto .
6 is a story that will have to be told elsewhere . )
7 The little heart has been put in a square frame , as any other shape would leave too much background space around the heart that would have to be filled .
8 However , it is yet another decision that will need to be discussed with clients .
9 This is the key to Dorothy Heathcote 's attitude to drama ; may I suggest it is also a key to the re-thinking that will have to be done vis-à-vis the arts and the curriculum .
10 In any case , if one insists on talking about knowledge , the question that will have to be answered sooner or later is what does constitute genuine knowledge , and if it should turn out , as it well might , that in defining the conditions of knowledge one has to make use of existential propositions of one sort or another , then the suggested reductivist paraphrase will not have achieved its purpose .
11 It is a point that will have to be stressed again and again .
12 Very high rates of extensional flow are therefore required in order to extend polymer chains , the criterion for the critical strain meaning that may need to be about .
13 Scorn , strangely , have managed to make a record that would have to be called ‘ Lick Forever Dog ’ even if , in error , the band had wanted to call it ‘ Bob The Kitten ’ .
14 Walking is the only means of transport that can claim to be universal … yet the pedestrian is the most neglected of travellers … ironically , it is perhaps because walking is so commonplace that it is neglected — pedestrians are so universal as to be almost invisible .
15 So here , for the fraught and confused among you , is a short guide to male restaurant etiquette that may prove to be of some assistance .
16 But it does mean that cross-addiction is a factor that may possibly be of some influence in all of this and that it is a factor that may need to be taken into consideration in the long term in attempting to improve the over all quality of recovery .
17 Another factor that will need to be taken into account is the prevailing level of interest rates , since these affect annuity rates .
18 There is one well-known materialist account of different modes of knowledge that might seem to be useful here in preserving the ‘ mode of knowledge ’ approach against the need for the more drastic behaviouristic alternative .
19 In 1975 he wrote his open letter to President Husak about the price that would have to be paid for delivering their country into the hands of an ‘ entropic ’ regime which depended ‘ solely on the ruling minority 's instinct of self-preservation and on the fear of the ruled majority ’ , a regime which positively required the suppression of truth and history for its surival .
20 But before this could be contemplated , there are some more serious problems with the positivist stance that would have to be resolved — again relating to its neglect of criminal justice processes .
21 They were a highly volatile entity that would need to be properly channelled , if not contained .
22 The area would also be unsuitable for a business park , because it is only 1.8 hectares in size and the necessary development would be uneconomic , considering the amount of traffic that would have to be accommodated .
23 It is one section of the hobby that will have to be market-driven .
24 If America and Eastern Europe have been the world leaders , the only countries in the world that can claim to be clean are those where the athletes are too poor to afford the drugs .
25 There is no neurophysiological model of the kind of convergence that would seem to be necessary for the many different sensations of the moment to be brought into synthetic unity , without loss of their individual distinctiveness and specificity , into the instantaneous sense of ‘ being here ’ ; or of the manner in which experience of many different moments can be synthesized into a sense of continuing self without those moments losing their separateness in memory .
26 But even these programs are small-fry compared to the program that would have to be written to simulate an emerging arms race between predators and prey , embedded in a complete , counterfeit ecosystem .
27 Slow play is the other problem for World Cup that will have to be addressed .
28 The volume of information that would have to be absorbed is simply too great .
29 By either course we need a considerable background of information that may seem to be largely useless until the creative moment arrives .
30 You see in British Steel we we have seventy thousand deferred pensioners and er it is a group of people that I feel extremely sorry for , because er in nineteen eighty-six British Steel introduced into their pension scheme while it was still in the public sector , retirement at sixty where with a pension credit spaced on length of service , so if you had thirty-five years service in , you could retire at sixty as if you were sixty-five and there was nothing done at all for deferred pensioners and in certainly our submission to British Steel for seeking improvements , we we asked that they er they look at deferred pensioner with a view to paying their pensions at sixty , recognising that it was a very high-class plane that might have to be er achieved in stages .
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