Example sentences of "[pron] must be [verb] that " in BNC.

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1 I could have given my information to any of your officers but I prefer to tell you because I must be guaranteed that the source of the information is kept secret .
2 Of course , this does n't mean that if a man exposes himself to you , you must be repressing that urge within yourself .
3 You may also need to help her to transfer to the list of your own general practitioner , if she and he are both agreeable to this ; and of course she must be assured that you , or some other member of the family will be with her on the actual day of the move or , if she wishes , take the responsibility of it off her shoulders completely .
4 Er you one must be reminded that er it 's only three weeks today from when I was made redundant
5 He must be hoping that the stimulus of playing the World Cup at home will provide the extra sparkle .
6 As for Adams , he must be hoping that he can regain his place on Party Politics in the coming season .
7 He must be hoping that the new buyer will complete this time .
8 She felt certain then that he must be thinking that if she was any sort of a journalist that she could do quite a write-up out of the considerable time she had just spent walking in his sole company .
9 Now 18 clear in the jockeys ' table , the Ulsterman has the Midas touch at present and he must be regretting that next week the seasonal festivities mean three days without racing .
10 However , it must be recognised that this relationship has been significantly affected by the unification episode' .
11 It must be recognised that an under-utilised labour force , without adequate welfare provisions , poses a potential threat to a LDC 's political stability which might discourage much-needed foreign investment and loans .
12 In the final analysis it must be recognised that the ECMs are demand determined , their ability to provide large loans quickly and efficiently as required by banks , multinational corporations and governments being the main justification for their existence .
13 Correspondingly it must be recognised that an individual has entered work with a particular educational standard .
14 Although I have stressed the importance of all children having access to the full primary curriculum , it must be recognised that some children do need special provision , more time , and/or extra help if they are to profit from the opportunity .
15 It must be recognised that there is another repository of values , language , which needs to be freed of male bias .
16 The contributors are not making the easy assumption that to validate their experience women do not have to put themselves into question ; on the contrary , it must be recognised that to be a feminist theorist may involve some painful and hard-won putting into question of the beliefs and commitments that are the point of departure .
17 Premature and difficult parturition are associated with a variety of disorders in child development , including some psychological and emotional disorders ; however , it must be recognised that pre-natal factors or others may have dual effect on both labour and child development rather than a causative effect from one to another .
18 ( It must be recognised that for one large group — that in which there is a strong belief in the sanctity and factual indissolubility of marriage — such considerations come much less easily : but in reality , even for this group , it is not now an impossibility for marital breakdown and separation , or nullification of the union , to take Place . )
19 Of course , the conditions of Russia in 1917 and the following years posed ‘ special problems ’ for the Bolsheviks , but it must be recognised that the tension between the tendency to treat each factory as the ‘ collective property of its own workers ’ and the need to ensure the subordination of production to a ‘ common political end ’ is in no way unique to the Soviet experience .
20 But if the support for the SNP was , like the Liberal vote , a substantially ‘ cross-class ’ phenomenon it can not so easily be categorised as a flight from ‘ class ’ as pertinent social collectivity , since it must be recognised that the ‘ national distinctiveness ’ of Scotland is overdetermined by the differential balance of classes in Scotland as opposed to England .
21 In order to ensure uniformity in all the member states , it must be recognised that the concept of ‘ matters relating to tort , delict and quasi-delict ’ covers all actions which seek to establish the liability of a defendant and which are not related to a ‘ contract ’ within the meaning of article 5(1) .
22 At the outset it must be recognised that there are three institutions of government , each with specific functions .
23 However , it must be recognised that a comprehensive and accurate empirically based resource allocation formula can not be achieved .
24 However , it must be recognised that at the current level of terrorist threat , full accompaniment of all patrols could be achieved only at the expense of aborting necessary anti-terrorist operations with a consequent increase in terrorist activity .
25 It must be recognised that knives are a common feature of everyday life and that , in the wrong hands , almost any bladed or sharply pointed article is potentially a lethal weapon .
26 Finally , it must be recognised that adjustment may be less than instantaneous , both because production processes take time and because the presence of transactions costs and other risks leads to a world in which contracts exist and expectational errors have real effects .
27 However , it must be recognised that such claims for compensation would involve an extension of Francovich , both because that was a case of complete non-implementation , not just defective implementation , and because the UK government could argue that its implementation of the Directive in 1981 was done on the basis of its good faith understanding of what European law then required and so there was no element of fault in its decision-making at that time .
28 It must be recognised that , apart from the most minor changes , such modifications are ‘ design ’ in the widest sense and are therefore subject to the uncertainty of success which accompanies most design work .
29 However , to achieve effective co-ordination between the new publicly funded bodies and the long-established private sector organisations , such as the Scottish Council and others , it must be recognised that the latter group is not able to subsidise projects nor to encourage company participation with a formula of matching expenditure .
30 It must be recognised that the use of facilitative techniques ( eg anatomically correct dolls , special play materials and other visual aids ) may create difficulties in subsequent court proceedings .
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