Example sentences of "that [noun sg] [be] to [be] " in BNC.

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1 After a week of confusion , warnings of constitutional crisis and outrage over the possibility that Parliament was to be bypassed , Foreign Secretary Hurd turned urbanity and understatement into performance art .
2 As evidence that money is to be made in Russia 's ‘ Wild East ’ , last month Hewlett-Packard Co and Swedish software firm CMA AB sealed a $3m contract with ASUNEFT in Nizhniy Vartosk , North West Siberia to supply a Unix system to automate oil field data acquisition in the region .
3 It is clear that money was to be made honestly at this profession ; even clearer that forgery and other types of fraud were frequently used by moneyers as short-cuts to wealth .
4 The type of detailed empirical research reviewed above suggests that scepticism is to be strongly recommended .
5 The Government has explicitly stated that help is to be targeted on industry and in the face of a continuing trade deficit , the recovery is hoped to be export-led .
6 To regard this as an ‘ injustice ’ runs contrary to the idea that divorce is to be obtained on proof of breakdown .
7 305U with side letter on reverse Side letter to be signed to ensure that there is no doubt that charge is to be in support of the guarantee liability .
8 I would , therefore , suggest that consent is to be explained by reference to its purported normative consequences only .
9 In this case Lord Parker L.C.J. held in effect that consent was to be assessed differently in the case of girls under 16 .
10 The L & NWR Loco Committee Minutes of 9 February 1847 state that water was to be supplied to tenants willing to pay an extra rent of 2p per week .
11 He frequently implies that knowledge is to be had by experience and by careful observation of the world .
12 In Shell UK v Lostock Garage Ltd [ 1976 ] 1 WLR 1187 Lord Denning MR explained what he thought was meant by the proposition that reasonableness is to be considered at the time when the contract is made : If the terms impose a restraint which is unreasonable in the sense that it may work unfairly in circumstances which may reasonably be anticipated , the courts will refuse to enforce the restraint : but it will not hold it to be unenforceable simply because it might work unfairly in certain exceptional circumstances outside the reasonable expectation of the parties at the time of making the agreement .
13 The principle that education was to be open to all , irrespective of means ; public galleries and museums should be open to all , the National Health Service likewise .
14 In his discussion of the problem in ‘ Mourning and Melancholia ’ Freud offers the initial hypothesis that mania is to be understood as a state in which the ego appears to have got over its loss of the object with the consequence that the instinctual drives previously fixated on it are now liberated — giving rise to the boundless energy and enthusiasm of the manic condition .
15 This makes a mockery of one of the aims demonstrated by Seona Reid , director of the Scottish Arts Council for the development of the arts in Scotland , when she says that quality was to be rewarded wherever found .
16 In May Justice Minister Kinkel announced that priority was to be given to the rehabilitation and compensation of victims of the SED regime , ahead of pursuing those accused of committing crimes or of assessing compensation claims of those who had been dispossessed of property by the regime .
17 If we regard our guide as simply looking for advice as to what moral rules are correct , unrelated to a particular decision which he is called upon to make or to a particular situation in which he is involved then it will be impartiality of the first and last types which are particularly relevant : that is , the formal requirement that legislation is to be universalised , and the material requirement that the decisions made are based on a consideration of all relevant factors .
18 He was so small and weak that illness was to be expected , but this still came as a shock to Tess .
19 This can be construed as being in accord with the important premise of this book that life is to be enjoyed .
20 In the final analysis , there can be only one conclusion to be drawn , and that is that the Christian promise of happiness in the ‘ hereafter ’ was in reality an appeal to ‘ selfishness ’ , which is also the appeal of the teaching of one of the basic premises of this book , namely , that life is to be enjoyed here on earth .
21 Ellsworth Kelly first saw Paris in 1944 at the age of twenty-one after the Normandy landing ; the young marine can not have imagined then how important that city was to be to his artistic career .
22 Sir , — Many readers will be saddened by the news that housing is to be built on the Tolly Cobbold sports field and paddock beside Cliff Lane and Landseer Road , Ipswich .
23 The need for trade-offs should be recognized clearly , so as to avoid the implicit assumption that dignity is to be pursued at all costs . [ … ]
24 This is indicated in Layton 's references to the views of science on the one hand in terms of ‘ the disinterested pursuit of truth ’ , and on the other , particularly by those involved in the Great Exhibition , as ‘ the producer for the industrial market place ( so that science was to be studied for the economic benefits it would yield ) ’ .
25 The Queen 's Speech also states that information is to be ’ available about the performance of individual schools . ’
26 I have never believed that consensus is to be spurned .
27 It implies that objectivity is to be sought , not by trying to root judgements in absolute standards , but on the contrary by treating all standards as provisional in order to get behind them to the reality of the concrete situation and the authentic response of the individual .
28 HOTELIERS have slammed as discriminating and illegal the confirmation that VAT is to be levied on packed lunches .
29 Whatever the applicant 's interest , the more serious the illegality , the more likely that interest is to be sufficient .
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