Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] [modal v] be [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Paintings from 50 of Britain 's most progressive galleries will be on show ; prices from £75 ( 071–359 3535 ) .
2 I 've , yeah I know , but it 's just some days you , I know , I see what you mean , talking about that , but at the end it is for your children anyway , cos you know , that money should be for your children and if you have worked and you put the money away for them anyway , you 've paid your taxes and things .
3 How each generation of parliamentarians in member states will try to guide the community 's political institutions will be for them to determine .
4 Sometimes the possible link can be from much longer ago than a few months and here the memory is almost invariably an unsolved murder case .
5 ‘ Needless to say , if we do agree , the responsibility for the consequences of that decision will be on your heads .
6 It is always a lie and never the truth , ’ Questionable though that judgement may be on the aphorism in general , it does seem to me to catch the half-formed nature of this observation — or perhaps , better speaking , its lack of a frame .
7 The professional framework will be in place — systems have been designed to support the all important task of needs assessments .
8 A professional photographer will be in the office today from 1.30 pm to 4 pm , tomorrow from 10.30 am to noon and on Thursday from 2 pm to 4pm .
9 It was a discernible unity , embedded though that unity might be in the economic order of the rest of the world .
10 That change would be in the best interests of the meat industry , the consumer and animal welfare .
11 That change might be in place by the time Pakistan visit West Indies this winter .
12 The SNP thought that if the ‘ independence-union ’ alternative was stressed , the crumbling of British Labour support would be to its benefit .
13 Kessler and McLeod also found plausible evidence in three studies that the buffering effects of emotional support might be at least as important in circumstances of chronic strain as for people facing the acute stress of major events .
14 ‘ Locally , both the Teesside TEC voluntary sector group and managing agents in Cleveland have told me what the effects of these blinkered policies will be in the coming year .
15 The historic route may be under the accountant 's scrutiny shortly : the recession in the building industry has led to a falling demand for cement and traffic is down to two or three trains per week .
16 In these circumstances we accept that it is reasonable that some trustees may feel that in the new situation produced by the tax the right course would be for the settled property to cease to be held on discretionary trust .
17 The greatest change will be in the public perception of what part universities play in the education system .
18 Both council agreed present day value of the award in that case would be in the vicinity of one hundred and twenty thousand pounds .
19 We have suggested that properly coordinated motility might be of crucial importance in promoting acid clearance , and could therefore be an unrecognised factor in the pathogenesis of duodenal ulceration .
20 One suggestion for avoiding this is to have the explicit tax rate apply only to net-of-transfer income earnings , so that if the benefit withdrawal rate is 60 per cent and the explicit tax rate 30 per cent the ‘ total ’ tax paid on an additional £1 of earned income would be at a rate , which is a sum comprising 60p less means-tested benefit , and 30 per cent of 40p = 12p explicit tax , i.e. 72p .
21 And each tag will be for a specific vehicle only , to guard against fraud , despite pleas from lorry firms to be allowed to transfer them around their fleets .
22 That pleasure will be for the peoples in and around the Pacific and Indian Oceans .
23 John Stuart Mill had claimed ( Rogers 1964 : 238 ) that pleasure could be of a carnal nature or of a ‘ higher ’ kind .
24 The Masonic Religion should be by all of us initiates of the high degrees maintained in the purity of the Luciferian doctrine .
25 This is because economic loss can be of unforeseen proportions , can far exceed , in many cases the total contract value , and thus be a risk which it is for all practical purposes beyond the financial strength of most businessmen to assume , particularly if they were to accept such risks routinely in all their business dealings .
26 The decision in Kirkham leaves open the possibility that a suicide in their right mind could be ex turpi causa .
27 and is that , I always feel threatened or paranoid I just want to make a point on on paragraph seven the rule in which to review the is that my understanding that review will be about the role and of the rule in which the .
28 So , the short-term effect may be on output as firms strive to meet the increased demand , but the eventual effect will be almost entirely on prices .
29 The only possible savings would be from reductions in the number of teachers in the maintained schools , which would come about if parents were to stick to the survey preferences that they indicated for the independent sector .
30 Labour supporters must be in despair at not being able to race away from the Tories in the run up to the election .
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