Example sentences of "have [prep] be [vb pp] by [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Some of that information has to be gathered by disinterested investigators , not by politicians or pressure groups intent on proving points .
2 Inspirational leadership has to be followed by mass production and widescale distribution systems if the original ideas are to be successfully marketed .
3 The political context of this is well discussed in Levi ( 1987 , Chapters 4 and 5 ) who argues that with the proposed deregulation of our prime export earner , the insurance , money and securities market , Britain has to be seen by prospective investors to have the power to eliminate financial fraud .
4 Where production extends over a long period as in construction industries and shipbuilding , measurement of work in progress has to be achieved by other means .
5 The depreciation has to be caused by physical factors such as noise , fumes , dust and vibration , and the compensation is payable by the authority responsible for the works .
6 Since the cost of control usually returns few , if any , financial benefits to the discharger and has to be met by increased prices , dischargers regard pollution control costs as a burden to be avoided wherever possible .
7 In Site Classe there is apparently full protection ( more akin to SSSIs in the UK ) and agricultural change has to be sanctioned by special Committees .
8 He recognised that some understanding is given directly by God , but also that it has to be appropriated by human beings using their reason .
9 The network news programmes provide only a ‘ headline service ’ , nothing can be dealt with in any depth and everything that is covered has to be supported by good televisuals .
10 Other changes to the 1956 Industrial Policy Resolution include scrapping the rule that foreign equity has to be accompanied by foreign technology .
11 The de-skilling , which currently forms the basis of homeworking and which is the worst destruction of human potential has to be countered by new modes of organization which could challenge the power of the new capitalism .
12 Almost by definition , crises are periods when the normally routinized operations of the bureaucracy are insufficient or can not be relied on , when decisions have to be quickly pushed up through the chain of command , and where unusually large and direct role in controlling policy implementation has to be taken by political leaders .
13 Any change in fiscal measures has to be agreed by unanimous vote in the Council of Ministers .
14 This clearly has to be remedied by repeated reminders that change can only be brought about by the counsellee 's efforts and that consequently , the only part that the counsellor can play is to help decide what is to be done , how , and when .
15 The extra impedance , being of the kind Z 1 rather than Z 2 , has to be provided by extra components .
16 Again , the extra impedance , being of the kind Z 2 rather than Z 1 , has to be provided by extra components .
17 In order to be good , type two ( the large-scale empirical approach ) has to be guided by theoretical perspectives produced by type one , otherwise it can become ‘ mindless fact gathering ’ with little structure , purpose or links between the parts .
18 Tanks for hard water can be of cast iron or sheet steel , but for soft water the sheet metal has to be protected by bituminous or plastics coatings .
19 just as policy has to be interpreted by local authorities and individual schools , so ideologies have to be translated into specific policies and practices , and this may lead to inconsisten-cies .
20 But as the replies from Collingwood and Parris make clear , there is more to a tutor-organiser 's success than this : for success has to be measured by different criteria according to the context of the work .
21 This is not to deny that the ending of a marriage through death , and through divorce , are in many ways very different experiences , nor that they may be handled differently in families , but the point here is that the idea that kin groups used to be much more stable over time than they are today has to be modified by historical evidence .
22 This simple scheme has to be buttressed by statutory provisions concerned to prevent abuse by debtors and to achieve a fair distribution of a debtor 's property among his creditors .
23 In the drawing , the gap between the two action channels symbolises that part which has to be supplied by human intervention .
24 I have no evidence one way or another as to the extent of risk of an episode occurring within five weeks but realism and commonsense tell me that there is a reasonable possibility that it will not and that even if he does unfortunately suffer such a trauma , he will if his life has to be preserved by artificial means , recover sufficiently for a decision at the main hearing as to further mechanical ventilation for the future .
25 Our knowledge of all these sides of religious life at Canterbury at the time of the Conquest has had to be reconstructed by laborious scholarship , largely because Lanfranc turned a blind eye to every aspect of a native religious tradition .
26 By far the greatest part of maintenance research developed by institutions of state for marginal areas has been soil conservation techniques ( outlined in Ch. 5 ) , which , as this book shows , have had to be imposed by colonial powers to be ‘ induced ’ at all .
27 Additionally , the Plant Records System would have had to be rewritten by external consultants in a fourth-generation language such as Oracle , and minicomputer versions of specialist packages for Finance and the Library , which are more expensive than networked PC versions , would have had to be purchased and tailored to our specific requirements .
28 And this arrangement , in turn , may have to be maintained by political or ideological means .
29 It is recommended that as much information as possible be supplied since the DC may have to be assessed by other users , and will certainly be examined by the QA user who will eventually decide upon the fitness for purpose of any modules referenced by the DC .
30 He believed that socialism would not come about as the inevitable result of impersonal laws of economic development but would have to be built by active human beings working purposively and creatively .
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