Example sentences of "be [conj] [conj] [pron] [vb base] " in BNC.

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1 The army list has provision for a number of characters without specifying who they are or where they come from within Ulthuan — it is assumed that players will like to create their own names and background histories for their characters .
2 Blindness can strike anyone at any time , regardless of who they are or where they live .
3 It 's only as you begin to come out of the Ketamine state that you begin to appreciate where you are or where you 've been .
4 I have decided not to list my visits and explain where we have been or where we have not been .
5 Some of the underlying assumptions of the discussion published below , are that before we begin to talk about an international/global unity/movement we need to look at our own situation in this country , at our own ’ political ’ community , which is international in terms of its make up , and the ways in which we operate or fail to operate together .
6 Because the chances are that because you know more about the subject than the general reporter , to whom — this may be to you the most important part of the day , most important story of your day , to him it might be only one of four , five or six that they 're doing .
7 In which case , since Copenhagen is n't the biggest capital in Europe , the chances are that if we look in the right places we 'll find them sooner or later ! ’
8 Mr Grout , but the rules are that if you do then you have to "
9 The IRB rules are that if you have a positive drug test you should be banned from the game for two years ’ — JOHN MAYHEW ( NZRFU doctor for the tour to Australia and South Africa ) on the quashing of drugs sentences on South Africans Balie Swart and Elandre van den Bergh .
10 " The rules are that if you leave your employment voluntarily you have to wait six weeks before you can claim Unemployment Benefit .
11 The facts are that if you propose an idea , four times out of ten someone will take issue with it by pointing out snags and difficulties ( see Difficulty stating on page 52 ) .
12 The purpose of the USRC was explained by its secretary to Lord Willoughby de Broke in August 1911 : " I still remain convinced as I have always been that unless you put yourself straight with the people on Social questions all your Tariff Reform , Home Rule or Constitutional thunderbolts will be discharged -in vain .
13 But my instructions for the lads have always been that if you go to a job for a lady particularly and then a man comes along and starts to get stroppy , you 'll have to explain to the lady you may have to leave it temporarily and go back .
14 Well she we to start with she went I think it might of been that cos we put Guy in it I think , that might have upset her .
15 How does it make you feel , you know as a social worker , erm when whatever you in whatever you do , every you do , no matter how effective you are , that you 're That when you leave those people , they 're in they 're basically in that same situation and equally v and still vulnerable .
16 I know exactly who I am and where I stand in the world .
17 That , and my only tape , ‘ Shepherd Moons ’ , reminding me of where I 've been and where I 've come from .
18 It is for all people , as people are and as they behave , for imperfect people living lives of their own in an imperfect world .
19 On the contrary , the study of the humanities is essential to society as a whole , since ‘ the humanities are concerned with a truthful understanding of where we are and where we come from ’ .
20 He argues that people in contemporary societies are increasingly obliged to depend on ‘ markers of ethnicity ’ as a means of identifying who they are and where they belong .
21 ‘ We do n't known what you are and where you come from .
22 Well that was fourteen minutes so you 've got fifteen minutes to ask questions of John , and it would help , I think , if you want to ask a question , to stand up and say who you are and where you come from , which constituency .
23 Technical yeah the technical people but you have to ensure do n't you that with with your audience that you understand who they are but if you do n't then you have to keep it to a common denominator .
24 Well , it , it might be that once we 've dealt , , once we have dealt and , and are dealing with the budget , it might be that we , we receive some , some papers erm , from the department for future social services reports .
25 It might be that before you start that if we training you need to see what the performance gap actually is .
26 ‘ It seems to be that as they get older the prospect of cohabitation is less exciting for women .
27 It may be that when we express our opinions , we only have available to us ready-made sets of ideas , ‘ discourses ’ , other people 's words which we choose from , string together in different ways and think ( mistakenly ) to be our own ; these include ‘ expert ’ ideas and the colloquial , common-sense versions of them absorbed by ordinary people in one way or another .
28 Hi , I have n't advertised myself but I 'm aware of friends who have and the biggest problem seems to be that when they respond to the ads and then they meet the gentleman in question who 's described themselves as six feet two who 's blonde and extremely handsome
29 er it goes back at least 300 years er possibly longer than that , it may be that when they finish the tar they had services up there to celebrate it or to remember one of the benefactors .
30 At first the language helper repeats each phrase for you as it is played back and you write it down , but your aim should be that when you have worked out a phonemic script for the language you teach the language helper to transcribe texts for you .
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