Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] [be] [noun] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 There may perhaps be properties which are evidence-transcendent , by which we mean that it is always possible that they be absent even though we have the best possible evidence of their presence .
2 There should also be legislation which will protect older people against bad practice and abuse in both private and public residential care and nursing homes and in hospitals .
3 Well I said it 'll soon be Christmas she said yes not quite four weeks she said .
4 quick look at the map , the River Ouse conveniently chops Selby district in roughly half , and that there might well be considerations which for the sake of was not okay .
5 Of course we were n't about to ask , what on earth has happened to you , since we knew it could only be O who had done this to him .
6 ‘ They could also be drug-runners who do n't care for strangers .
7 In the younger age range , there may also be spouses who have not yet reached retirement age and are still in paid employment .
8 Clearly , the category of social services is obviously too wide on which to base investigation since some of its elements may well be things which only rich societies can afford .
9 They may well be animals who bite the hand which feeds them ! ’
10 There may well be people who think , for example , that it may be a good thing to throw a bomb at some orange hall , because Orangemen have thrown bombs at Catholic halls .
11 There would always be critics who would see it all as a carrot to attract the donkey .
12 Now in Oxford erm we actually do n't have any land like that , and the problem was that , even if we had self-build houses on the land which is available at the moment , on which we want to build council houses but we have n't got the money to build council houses , if we were to allow self- build to go ahead on those sites because of the value of the land then the sorts of people who would actually be able to afford them would not be people on low incomes , or even sort of low to medium incomes , they would actually be people who were fairly well off and therefore not the people that we would want to be directing our resources at .
13 Wayne Clark , SNA architect with Cisco Systems commented that ‘ there will always be customers who go with APPN just because they 're IBM users ’ — but that may turn out to be a dated view : even IBM these days concedes that it is no longer in a position to dictate standards in the brave new world of open systems .
14 There will always be books which are worth launching with a party because you are going to get wide coverage , but the half-page ad in Cosmo on your own is n't worth half as much as an advertorial that is tied in with a bookshop group .
15 He added : ‘ Of course , there will always be parties which want to bribe and out-bribe the voters .
16 There will always be people who own more than us as well as plenty who own less than us .
17 Right and wrong must be standardised , or there will always be people who have the burden of guilt complexes .
18 While learning at an RYA centre guarantees success , there will always be people who will learn on a friend 's board or prefer to buy a board and teach themselves .
19 This we feel matches the real world situation , where er the poor being always with us , there will always be people who while wishing to have accommodation .
20 There will always be people who 'll take a chance .
21 There will always be subjects which can only be handled by referring them to apparently independent adjudicators outside government .
22 But there will always be clients whose English is poor , who are bewildered or have perhaps tried but failed , and who will still need specialist care .
23 There will also be parents who are dissatisfied with the school which their children currently attend and will be looking for an alternative .
24 With highly specialised products the models will probably be people who are already working with the product .
25 However comprehensive one 's descriptive framework may be ( and the one given in this course is very limited ) , there will inevitably be cases which do not fit within it .
26 Our loved ones will often be people we have known over many lifetimes , who have agreed to play a role which will help us to learn and grow — perhaps by recreating a childhood pattern , by rousing our hidden emotions , by challenging us to remain open , honest and loving , or by modelling qualities which we need to develop .
27 There will undoubtedly be things you already do well , that no longer require any conscious effort on your part .
28 Although he 's only the second son and will never be king himself , he 's still an important man and very popular , I hear , with many Ruritanians .
29 They can just be people who believe they ought to reshape society from top to bottom .
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