Example sentences of "he must " in BNC.

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1 Rosaline chides Berowne , and taxes him with certain conditions he must fulfil if he is to gain her hand ( the Princess and her ladies have responded to the death of the King of France by postponing any further romance for one year ) .
2 I think he must have juiced himself up .
3 The piece tests the actor 's awareness and imagination to the full , but nevertheless makes precise demands on him : he must follow exactly what the author says .
4 The public clearly believed that this ‘ restoration ’ would enhance the building 's interest despite destroying an historic element ; he must also have felt that a new timber framed facade , despite its inauthenticity , would give the pub an ‘ historic ’ character that was more readily recognisable and instantly attractive to potential customers .
5 After all , I came along when he must have thought you were safe to be a bachelor for ever and ever , and now he 'll never be a lord and everything . ’
6 She said : ‘ But he must have had some reason for wanting to talk to you . ’
7 In a strong wind he must refuse to move until sufficient additional crew arrive to handle the glider safely .
8 As he reaches the first solo stage , therefore , the pupil must either achieve a standard of flying which does not leave room for criticism , or he must learn to accept the particular instructor 's comments as fair and helpful .
9 If he has the slightest doubt about his ability to launch safely , bearing in mind such hazards as swinging to one side or a cable break at any stage , then he must refuse the launch .
10 Moreover , if a pilot decides not to launch in a situation like this , he must never be overruled or criticised for playing it safe .
11 However , with the negligible stick forces of the K6E , he must have rather overdone forward movement .
12 They illustrate some of the problems the policeman/anthropologist faces when he sets out to describe and interpret police culture , for he must — if the ethnography is to count — reveal hidden aspects of the relationships of power which are an integral aspect of this institution of state .
13 He must , as Ardener demonstrates , seek to sow ‘ semantic grain and grow theoretical crystals ’ which he may well appreciate no one is asking for .
14 He must understand how these are taught to the neophyte and inculcated into the consciousness to be transmitted across time .
15 This exists simply because he must necessarily reveal aspects of a closed and somewhat secretive society to the outside if he is to pursue any ethnography at all .
16 He must come to terms with living with this consciousness and with the inherent problems he will face in revealing this knowledge to the outside in an ethnographic account .
17 Moreover , he must come to terms with a new awareness of what he has previously accepted , perhaps without thinking , which under the intense microscope of social enquiry may well seem to verge on the ludicrous or to be morally indefensible .
18 It is therefore difficult for him to appreciate the general view of the Service , that , on his return … he must re-establish his professional standing , even though a few years earlier the Service had sent him to University because he had proved himself to be a good , practical policeman .
19 In doing this the anthropologist ‘ at home ’ quickly comes to understand why he must always stand on the margins of structure .
20 To coin another military metaphor , he must ‘ soldier on ’ knowing that all of this activity might well smack of sedition .
21 He must be aware , however , that any antagonistic or critical assessment will not only be unwelcome , but coming from an insider will smell of blasphemy .
22 in the local press joked that if he had done all the write-up said then he must have joined the police when he , was about 7 !
23 If he wins a subsequent bout also by disqualification , then he must be withdrawn for his own safety , since it is obvious that , in this tournament at least , he is not protecting himself adequately .
24 He must have been terrified . ’
25 But if Mr Menzies had thought of this he must have been keeping it for another Sunday .
26 The river dream came to him again , he was wading deep into the current , its coldness griped him by the crutch , shocking him , he must reach that bluish hovering light on the far bank — trees towering above — a house , a tall bulky building towering above him …
27 I do not know if Alex used it to court his Mary — he must have used something — ‘ The joke was unconscious but crowing laughter came from the young men beside the whisky jar .
28 Now the whole family was here , he must broach the scheme and work out the details of at least one refuge .
29 He knew he must have betrayed someone .
30 He must have needed money badly for that …
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