Example sentences of "[noun] they be [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Conversely , where the futures markets are used purely for hedging purposes or by sophisticated investors who are able to assess the risks they are taking and to integrate those risks into an overall investment strategy , there is less need for stringent regulation .
2 This they can not do , mainly because they take out of context the parental characteristics they are studying and then average out all fluctuations over time and situation .
3 Instead , they could have stayed on the side they were flying and made a right , instead of a left circuit , with height to spare .
4 In its first act the Constitutional Assembly denounced the use of violence , calling on guerrillas still fighting to renounce armed struggle , and asking the Medellín cartel to release the three remaining journalists they were holding as hostages [ see pp. 37957-58 ] .
5 Neurologists in the nineteenth century studied the effects of surgical removal of , or accidental damage to , the cerebral cortex in man and other animals without knowing the boundaries of the functional units they were proposing or their likely functions .
6 So long as the Squigs are successfully herded by the prodder-armed Night Goblins they are moved and fight just like any other unit .
7 So many players seemed to have nothing to do with the nations they were representing that asking them to picture their country would have been difficult enough , let alone vow anything to it .
8 In the immediate term they 're determined that there should be no vacuum following publication of the results of the government 's stocktaking of the Scottish condition , expected later this month .
9 These foods will make up the calories they are losing when cutting down on their saturated fat intake .
10 and his knees they were swollen and raw .
11 Its two most recent decisions on the Government 's power to restrain publications by former Crown servants — Spycatcher and the Cavendish Memoirs — were marked by references to the Convention and by an obvious desire manifested by most of the judges to ensure that both the law they were declaring and the decision they were taking in accordance with it would be seen to comply with Article 10 .
12 But you know they they really need to watch how much part time work they are doing because it could mean that their pension will be suspended if they did work too much .
13 May they be sustained and kept according to their need .
14 If she stayed indoors much longer , Murphy would have taken over her tasks and have filled the old beer crates they were to use as laying boxes with straw , and be collecting the scraps from the kitchen , that Dora had reluctantly promised to keep for her .
15 One day , soon after he arrived in the dale he had reason to go to another farm and overheard a conversation between two old ladies.p They were lamenting that it was a sad day because outsiders were coming into the dale and taking over farms and was n't it a shame they could n't be let to locals . ’
16 Industry will have to pay for the licences they are granted and will have a duty to reduce pollution and render their discharges harmless .
17 However , Baillie Cochrane explained that Scott 's first scheme had reception rooms ‘ on a magnificent scale ’ , but on the recommendation of the Select Committee they were omitted and reintroduced at the suggestion of Foreign Office officials as normal rooms which could be used for special occasions .
18 Rice farmers in central Java have staged protests about the compensation they were offered after their village was flooded by a dam development .
19 All holders of non-British passports and British passports issued abroad should check if any special permits are required for the countries they are visiting or passing through .
20 Some of the rapids were as difficult as those that had been our undoing on the first day , but tackled with a bit of newly learned skill they were challenging and exhilarating rather than terrifying .
21 Once students have identified the discourse type they are to process or produce , the next step is for them to ‘ find their way around ’ inside it .
22 ‘ Another 400 or 500 letters to Mr Howard might just help to remind the Government it is n't just the Labour controlled council they are hitting but the people of Langbaurgh , ’ she said .
23 Two years later , when the scandal peaked and middle-aged mobs shouted abuse at her as she sped away in large cars , it seemed less outraged morality they were proclaiming than outrage at being left behind in the 1950s .
24 Once again , the setting is theatrical , and the perspectives are varied — Act I presents the audience at a play ; Act II shows the characters in the play , and yet even they are not what they at first seem , as Frayn offers both the lines they are delivering and the thoughts they are actually thinking .
25 For the moment they were sitting and waiting .
26 At the house , Robert Asshe was frequently in the room , and often chose the pieces they were to play and sing .
27 Because of the kind of job they 're doing or the fact that they 're getting a wee bit more pay ?
28 And that 's what makes it even nicer because er it 's recognition from outside of of , the people that pay their wages , of the job they 're doing and er they 're very grateful for it .
29 ‘ They just want to do the job they are paid and trained to do and they want to do it in suitable clothing , ie in uniform . ’
30 If they come in trousers they are warned or made to take them off .
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