Example sentences of "[pron] are [conj] [modal v] be " in BNC.

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1 It also remains to be seen whether better preretirement and health education programmes will play a part in helping people prepare constructively for old age and to make a realistic appraisal of the matters which are and will be of greater importance to them than sea air .
2 ( c ) Benefits The individual receives or is entitled to receive , at any time , any benefit provided or to be provided out of that income or out of monies which are or will be available for the purpose by reason of the effect or successive effects of the associated operations on that income and on any assets which directly or indirectly represent that income .
3 who are or might be parties to the negotiation ;
4 Ok , post and/or email me direct if you are or might be interested .
5 You are or may be pregnant
6 To think that you are and will be mine and I yours through the mercies of God when this transitory life is past and gone , for all eternity !
7 Erm I take all the motions , first to try to assure these people that we shall , we are that will be taken and I hope that that er has been achieved .
8 Under section 25 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 , the High Court has power to grant interim relief where proceedings have been or are to be commenced in another Contracting State to the Brussels Convention or in another part of the United Kingdom , or where there are or will be any other proceedings within the scope of the 1968 Convention even if that Convention does not directly apply .
9 there are or will be proceedings whose subject-matter is within the scope of the 1968 Convention as determined by Article 1 ( whether or not the Convention has effect in relation to the proceedings ) .
10 There are and will be additional costs arising from the existence of JAA , not because the same job is being done twice , but because there is a need , if there is to be wide applicability , to ensure that common standards are being applied .
11 We have highlighted the importance of recognising that the Constitution is subject to change in response to political conflicts , and so we have pointed to the need to study the Constitution ( and constitutional theory ) historically , politically and critically , with an eye to the tensions between things as they are and things as it is thought they are and should be .
12 Few librarians would agree that censorship has anything to do with book selection , and indeed as we shall see they are or should be diametrically opposite operations with entirely different functions .
13 In similar vein others ( Descartes , perhaps ) have held that they are or could be ‘ indubitable ’ .
14 What are and will be the differences between them ?
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