Example sentences of "they [modal v] [verb] that [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 No one reading them could conclude that the Agency would allow anyone to suppose industrial co-operatives were in any way exempt from commercial discipline .
2 Our results will be reviewed with great interest in this context as they may show that the risk of cancer will be less after highly selective vagotomy than after truncal vagotomy .
3 They may fear that the condition of the person they care for might become common knowledge in the neighbourhood , and prefer the anonymity afforded by distant , specialized , non-local treatment facilities .
4 Although correlations never prove a causal relationship , they may indicate that the solubilities of fatty acids and bile acids are determined by insoluble calcium phosphate .
5 However , as building societies enter the area of unsecured lending , they may find that the banks have the advantage of greater expertise .
6 They may consider that the exhibition of works from war booty collections should become an established practice .
7 They must ensure that the matters for which Governments must be relied on are properly provided .
8 Under section 18 of the Act , control of the curriculum in county schools has shifted to head teachers , although they must ensure that the curriculum is compatible with their LEA 's statements on curricular policy — as modified by the governors in their own such statement .
9 The Blues are three points ahead of Forest now and they must ensure that the gap is still the same tomorrow night .
10 This is particularly important for those interested in research , since they must ensure that the department has the facilities and the expert supervision that will be necessary .
11 But if they are to make the right decisions , they must realise that the promise will turn to ashes if a similar progress is not made by software engineers and those who educate them .
12 They must show that the Crown by its servants was exercising , or threatening to exercise , powers under the statute in such a way as to constitute compulsion in law .
13 In A. G. v. Guardian Newspapers ( No. 2 ) ( H.L. , 1988 ) it was accepted that the Crown had a right to attempt to restrain disclosure of confidential information relating to the operation of the security services but that they must establish that the disclosure was in some way damaging to the public interest .
14 If pressed to go beyond these limits they should suggest that the questioning be addressed to ministers .
15 Not having been trained in school formalities , there is no reason why they should associate her test questions with the need to make explicit answers , or why they should pretend that the questioner is not there as the ‘ detached ’ answer requires .
16 Perhaps they should recognise that the countryside is not just a theme park where everything is nice , woolly and furry , but that real combat occurs between animals .
17 As schools become more practised and expert at constructing and implementing them , they should guarantee that the resources available to the school are used effectively to increase the range of opportunities and the quality of education for the pupil population .
18 Before the league authorities get in touch , however , with a reminder about the rules of professionalism they should know that the Smailes fortune is destined for charity .
19 Andrew says if people find it unbelievable that a nurse could ever kill then they should relise that the situation in Bosnia is unbleievable .
20 If they wish to make predictions , they should remember that the seeds will be developed under climatic conditions , which are currently unknown .
21 If Tretorn wish to bid for tournaments in this Category ( Category A ) , they might assume that a bid from a company producing pressurised balls is likely to succeed .
22 If editors and programme-makers and journalists were more aware of their legal rights , and more courageous in calling the lawyers ' bluff , they might find that the law is not quite the ass it sometimes appears .
23 As the garrison watched him from the shelter of the verandah they could tell that the rain was having a bad effect on him ; he clearly did not like the way it beat on his head and shoulders raising a fine spray ; nor did he seem partial to the way it poured down the neck of his shirt and coursed down his trouser legs .
24 They could see that the competitor 's pile of chocolate growing ever higher and that they were winning nothing , and yet they were powerless to do anything about it !
25 After they had been searching and moving on quietly for some time , they reached a place from which they could see that the field below them broadened out .
26 As they drew closer , they could see that the sides of the surrounding containers were covered with a gleaming wetness , spattered to a height a few feet above their heads .
27 He was beckoning to them and they could see that the group was preparing to move off .
28 And that produced a spin off effect , because the people who actually lived in properties or the shopkeepers in the properties , they could see that the outsides were improved , and that provided a spur for them to provide the insides .
29 From the sepoy lines they could see that the Residency had been abandoned , but a tattered Union Jack still flew over the banqueting hall .
30 The stories were their own , so they could see that the drama would be theirs .
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