Example sentences of "[vb mod] [be] that [art] " in BNC.

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1 In this chapter I have made no attempt to discuss why it should be that the DES has found itself in the situation of promulgating these various initiatives , or indeed how it sees the relationship between them .
2 It would therefore seem desirable that the order for costs on the making of a bankruptcy order should be that the petitioning creditor 's costs " to be agreed or taxed " be paid out of the estate .
3 This is a convoluted way of achieving a just result , and the law should be that the defendant should be proved to have realised that he was dealing with a policeman , or was reckless about the matter .
4 He said South Africa 's security forces were unable to deal with the violence , adding : ‘ We are calling for the formation of an internal peace force … the only qualification should be that the peace force be composed of people who are committed to democracy in this country . ’
5 Other bores can also be used but the obvious point must be that a small charge in the right place is a lot better than a heavier charge badly directed .
6 The implication must be that a lot of bids are being planned but never see the light of day .
7 The effect in essence must be that a Transfer Notice constitutes the Company the agent for the sale of the shares .
8 The effect in essence must be that a Transfer Notice constitutes the Company the agent for the sale of the shares .
9 The most important objection , and it alone is a decisive one , must be that no Englishman could conceivably use e as a means of representing [ ae ] .
10 McLeish decided that it was probably not the moment to suggest to her that the real reason any civil servant disliked lobbyists must be that the chaps were paid to make sure Ministers got a view other than the Departmental one .
11 Yet , at the end of a week of alternating euphoria and gloom , the sober verdict so far must be that the military side of this war is going well for the allies .
12 The conclusion must be that the major issues of military commitment outside Libyan frontiers were not generally discussed in public assemblies of any kind , unless it suited the Revolutionary Command Council .
13 The danger must be that the assessment of ‘ children in need ’ will , perforce , become another rationing device albeit of a more sophisticated kind than the ones used in the sixties .
14 Thus , part of the story must be that the name/noun contrast puts the two individuals in different roles with respect to situation , with the asymmetry resulting from the thematic subject component .
15 As this may well have occurred millenniums before that dawning power could produce an act of a nature that would leave the kind of evidence that archaeologists seek , then it must be that the true dawn is virtually undatable .
16 The truth must be that the Created God is not human or living as earth-s creatures are , but is without sex , exists only in the minds of man , and is undeniably and truly abstract .
17 The preliminary conclusion must be that the general approach taken in the research projects has been clearly vindicated .
18 The best hope for Buckingham Palace must be that the couple can avoid divorce , put their disappointments aside and agree on a distant but reasonably amiable working partnership .
19 Part of the answer must be that the element of risk in a PRP scheme reduces its attractiveness to employees , hence the advantages of introducing it at a time when the alternative ( no pay rise ) is even worse .
20 But Birmingham Labour MP Robin Corbett said : ‘ The hope must be that the police have now been able to find something that will help identify the real culprits . ’
21 The answer must be that the bird is designed by nature for this medium in the same way that dolphins are designed for life beneath the sea .
22 The clear inference must be that the average knight was expected to have at least the £120 a year postulated by Smith , and indeed the median of twenty-three in Buckinghamshire , Suffolk and Sussex in 1524–5 lay between £120 and £160 , while nationally the median of eighteen feodary surveys works out at £204 .
23 The broad conclusion must be that the majority of owners of small parcels lived within a radius of a very few miles .
24 The general message from the London and Madrid sales must be that the recent consistent and strong interest in Spanish Old Master paintings is still evident and , if anything , increasing .
25 The clear message must be that the old , negative , anticompetitive , anti-business attitudes are still alive and well in the minds of Labour 's paymasters .
26 And the conclusion must be that the unions failed utterly to make the case out .
27 The unrecorded item in this narrative must be that the terms of the final peace were agreed in principle by Pleistoanax and the Athenians when the former was still at Eleusis .
28 The answer , as it seems to us , must be that the court regarded the enhanced right of silence which common law and statute have traditionally conferred upon a person once he has been charged as providing him , in the language of section 2(13) , with a ‘ reasonable excuse ’ for failing to comply with the requirement .
29 ‘ The grounds for making action by a building society or associated body subject to investigation under the scheme must be that the action constitutes — ( a ) in the case of a building society , a breach of the society 's obligations under this Act , the rules or any other contract , or ( b ) in the case of an associated body , a breach of the associated body 's obligations under its rules ( if any ) or any contract , or ( c ) unfair treatment , or ( d ) maladministration , in relation to the complainant and has caused him pecuniary loss or expense or inconvenience .
30 The grounds of any complaint must be that the action complained of constitutes , in relation to the complainant : — ( a ) in the case of a participating society , a breach of its obligations under [ the Act of 1986 ] , its rules or any other contract ; or ( b ) in the case of a participating associate , a breach of its obligations under its rules ( if any ) or any contract ; or ( c ) unfair treatment ; or ( d ) maladministration .
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