Example sentences of "[Wh adv] [noun pl] [vb mod] to [be] " in BNC.

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1 The history of administrative ideas and management theory is a history of prescriptive statements about how organizations ought to be structured to achieve their goals ( Abrahamsson 1977 ) .
2 The advantage of having trekked with a World Challenge Expedition is that another time she will know how things ought to be planned .
3 Changed circumstances also mattered to Waters ( 1979 : 47 ) who described outstanding schools as places which were run by heads " with flair , wisdom , energy and that sense of knowing how things ought to be " but who emphasized , too , that these qualities needed to be partnered with an ability in organization and management in a wide variety of fields .
4 The increasing importance of a senior participant 's ability in management and organization led to the conversion of traditional heads from being people of experience and goodwill ( and who had a sense of how things ought to be ) into planners and implementers .
5 Within yards of the station , you can catch trout for tea , sup Yorkshire ale , and see how things used to be at Beck Isle Museum of Rural Life .
6 It is pointless.and harmful to hark back to how things used to be , although the conflict of loyalties may be hard to handle .
7 Through events of different kinds we are likely to be put in touch with aspects of ourselves which previously have been overlooked — we are given a jolt , and have to make a bridge between how things used to be and how they threatened .
8 One of the best known approaches as to how decisions ought to be made is that of Simon , who developed the behaviour alternative model .
9 For that 's the place where traitors ought to be .
10 The reason why changes ought to be made in language is to bring it into line with the way things really are .
11 I even passed a couple of oast houses where hops used to be dried after being picked by families of East Enders for a pittance and a daily beer ration .
12 Indeed , to speak of interests at all provokes confusion , for it suggests that these interests pre-exist the determination of the question where liabilities ought to be created according to distributive principles .
13 The best example is California — the shift of population from the countryside to the cities meant more cars , more houses where orchards used to be , less clean air , fewer clean lakes and rivers , etc .
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