Example sentences of "the [noun pl] [modal v] be [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The activities may be spontaneous or at the suggestion of the teacher .
2 The terms of the contracts should be precise enough for there to be an understandable relationship between the contract and the underlying physical .
3 Boxing , or football for that matter , was stili pretty rough and the crowds could be crude and rowdy , but the overall impression was of a more orderly world .
4 Nevertheless , the radioactivity imparted to the pebbles must be weak and transient for obvious health reasons , and this means that radioactivity detectors must be very near the pebbles before they are located , thus increasing the tedium of the experiments .
5 Following this event the ramps will be available for hire , for either events or youth clubs or whatever .
6 Now , the polytechnics-cum-universities will be able to award their own degrees .
7 The clubs can be custom-fitted to the individual , which is another persuasive selling point , and I liked the way they sat at address and the fact that they were easy to align .
8 They are a result of the auditors saying that the accounts must be prudent .
9 The programmes will be subject to review with the passage of time but no substantial additions to them will be made for the first six years ( except for changes required because of matters outside of governing body control and except for minor alterations to equipment ) .
10 If it does n't , the institutions should be prepared to exercise their power and veto the 10 in one package they are being bullied into .
11 It follows from this that the institutions must be willing to risk a proportion of their investment on the basis of the business plan presented to them by management , and because of their view of the management team .
12 They alleged that with a three-man board , the Deanses would be able to ride roughshod over anyone 's wishes but their own , to the prejudice of minority shareholders .
13 Alternatively , many charities or bodies such as the Scouts will be delighted to deliver through every letter box in the area for you at a very modest fee .
14 He thought it would certainly be a couple of days ' journey to the Fire Court — the giants would be sure to know , he said , because they had already sent emissaries with the marriage proposal .
15 Clearly this would only be the case if the company was perceived as an entity distinct from its shareholders so that it followed that the company and not the shareholders would be liable for any debts .
16 What is the logic that dictates that the shareholders should be entitled to the corporate surplus , instead for instance of the employees or management , with the entitlement of the shareholders reduced to a fixed return on capital ?
17 The element of the purchase price on the buy-in which constitutes a distribution on which the company must pay ACT , and on which the shareholders will be liable to income tax , is the amount by which the price being paid exceeds the subscription price for the shares ( usually the nominal value plus any share premium ) — see s211(5) .
18 2.12 The Surveyors shall be entitled to attend every Inspection and the Landlord shall procure that the Architect shall have [ due ] regard to any written representations made by the Surveyors to the Architect concerning the issue of the Certificate within [ 3 ] working days after the date of the Inspection but the issue or non-issue of any Certificate shall be in the sole professional discretion of the Architect
19 The Iraqi Foreign Minister , Tariq Aziz , told the American television network C N N , that the Westerners would be free to leave once the White House made that promise .
20 Pigeons will use me for a launch-pad , and the winds will slowly wear me to a stump , but the views will be terrific .
21 Although the courts might be willing to imply terms , for example that the licensee or " purchaser " of such systems owns the copyright in any output , it is obviously more sensible to recognize the difficulties associated with this part of the Act and to make suitable contractual provision for ownership ( as opposed to authorship ) of computer output .
22 Now the courts would be likely to award damages instead which might be considerable in our example .
23 The courts may be impressed by the expertise of the social workers ; alternatively , they may tend to side with parents faced with the power of the Social Services Departments .
24 In limited circumstances the courts may be prepared to imply the agreement to run the risk ( e.g. ICI v Shatwell ) .
25 Parliament has intervened to give special protection to press reports of statements made on significant public occasions , and there are hints — no more — that in certain cases the courts may be prepared to extend protection of qualified privilege to media investigations of major public scandals .
26 Yet while the mother has all the rights invested in her , the courts will be amenable .
27 The courts will be able to order longer and more intensive supervision and treatment for sex offenders .
28 Although normally the courts will be reluctant to intervene in ‘ matters depending essentially on political judgment ’ , the prospect of challenge in the Divisional Court is one that any Minister exercising a statutory power , or any official advising on such a decision , is bound to keep in mind .
29 For these reasons , it might well be that the courts will be reluctant to interfere with the judgment of the policeman on the spot , especially if he is an experienced officer .
30 Thus in the medical field , especially with interventionist techniques involving implantation of human products , for example blood or biologics , this may be considered a supply of services because the courts will be reluctant to regard matter of human origin as " goods " ( see Perlmutter v Beth David Hospital ( 1955 ) 123 NE 2d 792 ) .
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