Example sentences of "words to be " in BNC.

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1 Susan said , loudly enough for her words to be clearly audible , ‘ That is not what I said President .
2 Of course , when it came time to write the bill , there were great problems in choosing the exact words to be employed so that it would n't be seen by anyone as a ‘ Euthanasia Bill ’ .
3 I have tried to emphasize the positive in this book , and in that spirit I should like to repeat that the longer term counter to fighting , jealousy and acquisitiveness is to train the child , patiently and repetitively , to share , to wait patiently , to see that pulling hair hurts , to co-operate — in other words to be socially sensitive .
4 Also , the scale of the problems tends to be smaller ; for example , there are , typically , far fewer anaphors than phonemes in a sentence , and fewer focused candidate referents for a pronoun than ( in a large-vocabulary application ) candidate words to be considered for a given portion of speech .
5 I think that what she really wants is for words to be more like numbers .
6 SEX — TWENTY-FOUR ‘ SEX- ’ WORDS TO BE IDENTIFIED
7 Mr Evans-Lombe concluded by saying that , if he were wrong in holding that s 20(1) ( a ) permitted words to be added to a will , he would have held that the 1989 will should be struck down as failing to give true effect to Mrs Wordingham 's intentions .
8 The number of words to be searched is an heuristic decided upon by the user .
9 It would be desirable to be able to discard those candidates which are too short or too long to be the correct word — this would reduce the number of candidate words to be considered for further processing .
10 If shape information were available accurately from the pattern recogniser it should enable more candidate words to be discarded due to incorrect shape .
11 The dawg structure ( section 3.2.5 and section 3.3.3 ) is optimal for memory requirements ( section 3.3.5 ) , but does not allow additional information about words to be stored .
12 He doubted whether Mapleton intended his words to be offensive .
13 In the first two versions , you can choose the frequency of the words to be blanked out ( ‘ every fifth word in the text ’ , for example ) and the program will blank out either half of the word or the whole word .
14 Listening : a text is dictated at a speed which allows only key words to be noted .
15 Vocabulary explores words and the learning process in the context of the learner 's thinking and feeling , and its activities are based on the premise that depth of experience and personal interaction are necessary for words to be permanently acquired .
16 The message , the actual information , is put in by the user ( words to be processed , for instance , or numbers to be crunched ) or by professional suppliers ( of training manuals or porn films ) .
17 The Text table contains the full text of all versions of all entries from whatever source , OED , Supplement , NEWS ( New Words to be added for 1989 ) , or those entries created directly by lexicographers .
18 The separation of unions by enterprise may lead them to show an ‘ excessive identification with the interests of the firm and subordination to the authority of management ’ ( Cole 1971 p.260 ) or in other words to be unions ‘ by appointment ’ .
19 Now the first question to consider is whether the biblical writers intended their words to be taken as history or as myth .
20 This delay suggests that he had not intended his angry words to be taken literally , but at least one of his sons was clearly capable of making trouble , while claiming to be doing no more than carrying out his father 's wishes .
21 This instruction specifies a number of words to be moved n , a source , and a destination address .
22 On some computers such instructions are special cases of normal instructions , as in the example above ; another example might be a multiples length move instruction , with the number of words to be moved specified as zero .
23 They are , in part , inevitable in writing , especially when the writer is thinking hard , and may be missed when the piece is proof-read , because we expect the words to be correct , and read them as though they were .
24 Ideally , you should treat each child as an individual , with his own list of words to be learnt ; but that 's impossible when you have another thirty children in the class .
25 No young people , nobody enjoying themselves , only a handful of meaningless words to be allowed .
26 then we may be sure both that the sergeant means his words to be perceived as an order , and that the private will perceive them as such .
27 If a person writes a book or magazine article denying that he has committed any crime , are his words to be interpreted as his opinion regarding the crime ?
28 The court therefore has to approach its construction on the footing that the new Act may exhibit policies and intentions which are not necessarily the same as those in the earlier Act , and which require similar words to be given different meanings from those which the courts gave them under the earlier legislation .
29 But when a lawyer asserts that A can sue B , what he means is that A can sue B , successfully ; if he meant his words to be taken literally , they would not have been worth the uttering .
30 He will venture to suggest , with the greatest possible respect to Mr. Justice Blank , that his lordship perhaps did not intend his words to be understood in their widest acceptation .
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