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

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1 In the UK , for example , economic expans-ions often had to be cut short by restrictive domestic policies as an increased demand for imports led to a deterioration in the balance of payments .
2 Sir Edward Boyle , probably the most gifted and perceptive Conservative Education Minister of the post-war years , appreciated that for schools to flourish teachers need to be kept abreast of good practice and encouraged to be responsive to the findings of contemporary research .
3 In the mild south , gardeners can get away with plunging them in their containers buried in peat in the garden , but up here they 'll need to be kept safe from hard frost in a cold frame .
4 After a voir dire the judge admitted the oral admissions but excluded the written confession , because ( a ) the breaches of C 11.5 and 11.6 were relatively trivial ; ( b ) it would have been impracticable to have a contemporaneous note of the conversation and there was therefore no breach of C 11.3(b) ( ii ) ; ( c ) Findlay was shown the notes as recorded in the custody record and there was no need to record the refusal in the pocket book as well ; ( d ) there was a serious breach of section 58 and Code C 6.3 in ordering Findlay to be kept incommunicado without sufficient reason and therefore although the interview leading to the written confession was itself fairly conducted the confession would be excluded .
5 This Act required new educational buildings to be made accessible to disabled people , unless this was incompatible with the efficient use of resources .
6 An arrangement had been made in association with the World Bank for Scottish advice to be made available for primary education in Pakistan .
7 Most , however , felt that such practices were not topics to be made available for public scrutiny .
8 On Aug. 22 a new company formed by three leading West German companies agreed to take 75 per cent of shares in the East German state-owned electricity concern , with the remaining 25 per cent to be made available to other investors .
9 Any information gained from aerial surveillance would have to be made available to other signatory countries on request .
10 Furthermore , the military 's data banks , which contain information on ocean temperatures and currents , weather patterns and changes in vegetation in many regions of the world , are likely to be made available to environmental researchers .
11 Digitizing existing maps is essential if the data derived from decades of surveying ( topographic , geological , pedological , and so on ) are to be made available to digital cartographic systems .
12 Not only does the specialist equipment have to be made available to disabled people ; training and advice on how to use the equipment should also be provided .
13 The hon. Gentleman asked first why the assessment credit , the skill check credit , is not to be made available to unemployed people .
14 They also want funding to be made available from new sources responsible for unemployment , to help the CAB cope with unemployment related stresses .
15 The benching will need to be made good with new mortar ( benching is designed to have a slope of 1 in 6 ) and the walls of the inspection chamber repaired with small pieces of brick mortared in place .
16 Public law remedies will enable him or her to establish the illegality of the order ; but , unless the applicant can take advantage of some statutory provision for compensation , he or she will have to establish an entitlement to damages in private law if the damage is to be made good by monetary compensation .
17 ‘ It is important if Leeds City is to be made attractive to good footballers that the club should have the reputation of conferring good benefits , ’ he told the Yorkshire Evening Post .
18 Briefly , we would prescribe certain categories of development which were prohibitable without compensation , while allowing others to be prohibited subject to full or partial compensation .
19 Keynes divided the demand for money into three types : ( a ) the transactions demand , which is the demand by firms and households for holdings of money to finance day-to-day transactions ; ( b ) precautionary demand , which arises out of uncertainty and the desire not to be caught short of ready cash ; and ( c ) the speculative demand , which is the demand for money as a financial asset and therefore part of a wealth portfolio .
20 THE Bank of Scotland has introduced a high interest , instant access Deutsche Mark money market account , based in London , which enables interest to be paid gross to German residents .
21 senior police officers not to be held liable to individual officers for injuries received at hands of riotous crowd .
22 He said it was not usual for patients to be left alone for long periods of time and organisation on the ward involved was usually very good .
23 There will be provision for the shares to be sold free from adverse interests and with all future rights but , perhaps , with the right for the seller to receive a final pre-completion dividend .
24 The new service got off to an inauspicious start when the unit earmarked for a media preview on Friday had to be substituted due to technical problems .
25 It came into being on the groundswell of the earlier federalist enthusiasm , while still being sufficiently limited and pragmatic to be deemed feasible by senior politicians who themselves were keenly interested in fostering moves towards greater and effective cooperation .
26 If shape information were available accurately from the pattern recogniser it should enable more candidate words to be discarded due to incorrect shape .
27 The schedule action to be taken relative to necessary works .
28 It would be delightful if this pessimistic and disappointed paragraph were to be proved false by subsequent activities .
29 Some of the original facilities have had to be discontinued due to high operating costs and relatively low demand .
30 The 1960 Grand National was the first race to be shown live on British television .
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