Example sentences of "[noun pl] was [adv] to [be] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The tendency of a work to deprave or corrupt its readers was henceforth to be judged in the light of its total impact , rather than by the arousing potential of " purple passages " .
2 The book which contained the fruits of Dr Jaffery 's labours was about to be published .
3 Piers was nowhere to be seen , and without his presence in the kitchen she thought carefully about what she was going to do with the bits of chicken and the assortment of vegetables .
4 On the one hand , trade unionists were increasingly confident that the period of post-war wage reductions was about to be halted , even if a battle remained to be fought .
5 At the beginning of the 37th general congregation Archbishop Felici announced an alteration in the rules governing secrecy : from now on it was permissible to reveal what was said in debates in the Council , though discussion in commissions was still to be kept from journalists .
6 Unhappily , the suppression of the greed and lust of evolution , innate in all individuals was not to be easily set aside .
7 Whatever showmanship may have been developed in the CHAB productions was now to be used originating talks programmes and other current affairs features , including discussion groups , from the Vancouver studios of CBC to the forty-odd stations of the national network .
8 This happy state of affairs was soon to be destroyed , for Seth , the younger brother of Osiris , was jealous of Osiris 's power and prestige and determined to seize the throne for himself .
9 It was also announced that the number of conciliar periti was not to be increased — a decision not strictly adhered to .
10 The expectation of good relations was not to be fulfilled .
11 The suspension of all social security payments was only to be temporary , part of a national effort to restore confidence in the pound .
12 Disbelief that closures could be achieved within these constraints was never to be wholly suspended and in important ways served to hamper the subsequent implementation process .
13 As Davy wrote later , John Buddle , the mine inspector , convinced him that , ‘ as far as ventilation was concerned , the resources of modern science had been fully employed ; and that a mode of preventing accidents was only to be sought for in a method of lighting the mines free from danger . ’
14 whereby provision by extra-mural departments was not to be automatically mediated through expressions of need channelled through voluntary bodies , especially the WEA .
15 If Tara 's brilliance , if the radiance that had once shone for Ireland 's High Kings was ever to be kindled again , Medoc must be driven out and destroyed .
16 In the context of these investigations , I used the concept of danger clues to describe any piece of information that would tend to alert a social worker to suspect that child abuse was taking place.s An important source of danger clues was obviously to be found in the condition of the child , particularly its physical state and behaviour .
17 For a week or so in February , a pair of longtailed tits was often to be seen in and beneath the shrubs near the nutbag .
18 The essential feature of the community of Jerusalem Christians was their total other-worldliness , i.e. the three-key decision ( a ) between work and leisure ; ( b ) between consumption , saving and giving ; and ( c ) between accumulating and selling assets was not to be influenced by personal consumption and gain .
19 The years of steady expansion were over , although achieving the hoped-for cuts was not to be as easy as the centre expected .
20 Classics was also to be Nietzsche 's chosen profession and his rise in it was rapid .
21 The judgment of the Commissioner on this and the other issues was not to be gainsaid .
22 that most of the present range of home-school links was already to be found in local primary schools well before PNP , and that activity in this field since 1985 has involved the further development and dissemination of existing practice rather than the devising of innovative techniques .
23 The basis of future regional policy and its instruments was eventually to be found in the Thompson Report ( 1973 ) on the regional problems of the enlarged EC , which reaffirmed the view that in the long term , monetary union was not possible without an effective regional policy .
24 The dissolution of the Lusignan lands was not to be completed until 1328 when the last claimants were finally compensated by the French crown .
25 The Railway Act 1974 replaced the service-by-service approach with a block grant on the EEC model for ‘ public service obligation ’ ( PSO ) ; support for metropolitan area rail services was also to be provided by the Passenger Transport Executives of the large metropolitan authorities .
26 The 5 per cent tax on the sale of all production and technical output , consumer goods , completed jobs and paid services was technically to be introduced on Jan. 1 , although the authorities were given until Jan. 15 to confirm provisions for its calculation and collection .
27 The monotonous cawing of seabirds was soon to be broken , however , and not by quite such a fearful development .
28 Perhaps the punishment of the wrong-doers was just to be finished , kaput , over ?
29 The Republic 's ability to absorb the effects of dramatic electoral and governmental shifts was about to be tested .
30 She had more than enough to cope with , but the chance of a job to bring in a few extra shillings was not to be scorned .
  Next page