Example sentences of "be [verb] full " in BNC.

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1 Certainly in recent years Pound 's interest in mystery-cults has been more than antiquarian ; in ‘ was Erigena ours ? ’ he asks whether the philosopher Scotus Erigena was one of the Eleusinian brotherhood , and ‘ ours ’ can be given full weight — Noel Stock goes so far as to claim ( op. cit. p.22 ) that some of the obscurity of these later Cantos is deliberate and arcane — ‘ he writes about them as an initiate in words that are both ‘ published and not published ’ … ’ .
2 The Government still has to work out a points system whereby a cross-section of Hong Kong residents , whose skills are needed , will be given full British citizenship rights between 1992 and 1997 .
3 Oh yes , of course , these mostly ill-educated people would be given full instruction on how to regulate the dome environments , how to manage the delicate hydroponics farms clustered like eggs round the city skirts .
4 Foreign oil workers have been assured by their Libyan employers that they will be given full freedom of movement .
5 The Railway Inspectorate will be given full powers to ensure the highest standards of safety .
6 The EC rules on establishment require that in such cases evidence of equivalent expertise acquired in the other member states must be given full faith and credit in the host state .
7 In order to be given full credit as CPE , reading should be technical rather than general .
8 Complacency can not be given full rein , for the future of local airfields and light aviation in the UK is under threat .
9 Parents should be given full information about special school and integrated provision when placement is being considered .
10 The danger in the present situation should be given full recognition because of the so-called Black-on-Black violence and the hardened attitudes of extreme rightwingers who seem to use the American Ku Klux Klan strategies to terrorise people .
11 Although the wording indicates that this had given rise to " considerable discussion " , implying that these methods had been questioned by some present , and the phrase " it was unwise to make any further interpretation " implies that those methods should not be spelled out too explicitly , the clear conclusion of the conference was that the policy being followed by 5 Corps should be given full backing .
12 However , it did see a need , if these arrangements were to be given full effect , for the local authorities ‘ to enhance their powers over individual institutions ’ by amending the existing Articles of Government .
13 In relation to individual service users and carers , they should be given full and clear information about the assessment process as it will affect them , how they might be involved and a clear statement of its outcome .
14 In return , the British group will be given full access to the resulting files for their own research .
15 The integrity of a community 's conception of fairness requires that the political principles necessary to justify the legislature 's assumed authority be given full effect in deciding what a statute it has enacted means .
16 It was probably a below standard performance from us , but the players have got to be given full credit for the way they defended .
17 To pay for the considerable expense of running the hospital , the directors of Ca'Granda offered portraits to any worthy donor , the portrait to be painted full face for a large contribution , profile for a much smaller one and in various degrees between the two .
18 After all , CDI can deliver video even though it is certainly not full screen and may not be considered full motion .
19 This is the percentage mark at which the volume will be considered full if the next module to be formatted requires more than the residual space in the volume .
20 Specify a figure between 1 and 100 to signify when the media type is to be considered full ( 95% is a recommended figure ) .
21 At the first meeting of the Central Authority , Shinwell had told Citrine and his colleagues that a reasonable aim would be to meet full demand by 1951 ‘ if that was at all possible ’ in the light of other national investment demands .
22 Solvay , a major producer of bulk inorganic chemicals as well as plastics and pharmaceuticals , would be gaining full control of the expanding hydrogen peroxide business , with its ‘ green ’ credentials and high margins .
23 Where textual or illustrative copyright material is to be included full information of the source of the material shall be provided .
24 In almost all investigations of any size , one investigator can be occupied full time taking statements during the first few days after the accident .
25 Scientists then take these unfinished , inexact hypotheses and present them to other scientists for the express purpose of seeing if the hypothesis will not in fact be shot full of holes , hoping almost that it will be so shot , because Knowledge and Truth are thereby served , if only negatively , in having one more tenuous , groping hypothesis about the nature of the world shown to be false .
26 I was fortunate to be granted full refugee status in under a year , this entitled me to bring my family here .
27 Eden was probably referring to the unfortunate statement from Henry Hopkinson , junior minister at the Colonial Office , that Cyprus would ‘ never ’ be granted full independence , and a domestic slip-up : an announcement that the manufacture of heroin would cease entirely in the UK ( the medical profession subtly pointed out its legitimate uses as a drug ) .
28 A graduate will be recognized as a licentiate member and will be granted full professional membership after two years ' appropriate management experience .
29 Graduates with appropriate subject profiles will be recognized as licentiate members and will be granted full professional membership after two years ' appropriate management experience .
30 One can speculate that this boy might some day join one of the rebellious students who fight the establishment in an astonishingly infantile way , expecting at the same time not to be punished and to be granted full amnesty for their transgressions , just as a small child would expect from an indulgent parent .
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