Example sentences of "have be [adj] by [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If manufacturing employment had remained at the 1966 level until 1974 then output would have been higher by 8.6 percent ; but if Britain had matched French or German growth in output per man hour since 1958 then even with the reduction in the labour force the 1974 output level would have been higher by no less than 70 per cent [ Gomulka , 1979 ] .
2 If the freefall had gone better on Sunday then we would have been untouchable by this stage , but as it is the French are still ver close and their shooting will be very good .
3 Bismarck must indeed have been impressed by this example of family loyalty .
4 Once , she supposed , she must have been impressed by formal evening wear on good male bodies , but now it annoyed her .
5 Carew 's bleak diagnosis can hardly have been uninfluenced by several decades of mounting concern at the impermanence of non-agricultural employment compared with the stability of farmers fully occupied tending their land , and men continuously employed as servants in husbandry engaged for a year at a time .
6 If one allows for a surrounding portico , 10 ft wide , the overall dimensions would have been 71 by 69½ ft , giving an area of 4934.5 sq.ft , making it the second largest temple in Britain .
7 However , the position would have been different if the nodes had been defective and caused damage or injury to the buyer : the seller would then have been open to a claim in tort , or perhaps under the Consumer Protection Act 1987 , but would have been unprotected by any exclusion , limitation or indemnity clauses .
8 Labour shortage could also have been relieved by longer hours of work .
9 Having contemplated the relativity of all motions within the universe , Nicholas would have been astonished by any suggestion that a moving earth was destructive of a Christian world-view .
10 Essentials that were not available locally and the growing desire for non-essentials must have been satisfied by surplus produce .
11 The theme of the poems was hardly a happy one ; Coleridge was now frequently ill with complaints which , though genuine enough , must surely have been complicated by psychosomatic factors .
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