Example sentences of "it [modal v] [adv] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There must be mechanism for identifying persons in need and for reaching out to those willing to participate ; it may also at times be necessary to reach out to those who do not wish to participate but are at risk of harm to themselves or others .
2 To begin with , people who have suffered from schizophrenia are readily identifiable , and it may well at times be possible to make the lives of this high-risk group less eventful .
3 Cross-addiction ensures that the weaker Fellowships receive support from members who have experience of stronger Fellowships but it may nonetheless at times be more helpful for a newcomer to receive slightly less individual identification but gain the experience of a stronger Fellowship .
4 The alternative is that the dog , like the children , has the capability of becoming aware of the misery of its present existence , although it may never in fact do so .
5 It , it ought not to matter , but unfortunately I think it does , I think we live in a society where the visual appearance is every thing .
6 If they would not or could not , at the request of a Government sympathetic to them and their aspirations , give sufficient support to the economic policy advocated by that Government in the general interest , it could not with confidence be supposed that trade union representatives on the boards of companies would give sufficient support to the policies of those companies .
7 But it could always of course come in as an odd .
8 And it ca n't by definition be about sexual liberation simply because it duplicates and exploits those same power relationships . ’
9 But if on the other hand the curtilage were particularly large , erm then er it it were otherwise unbuilt er it would not of necessity form part of the built area of the settlement , if the situation were on the periphery .
10 It was hoped to use the Crown allotment in Exmoor Forest for this purpose , but after partition the Commissioners decided that it would not in fact be suitable , and in 1818 it was sold for £50,000 to a Mr Knight , who enclosed it .
11 ( See re Barry Artist [ 1985 ] 1 WLR 1305 , where the court stated that it would not in future accept an informal decision to reduce share capital . )
12 It will all without question make the schools and LEAs more accountable , at least in terms of pupil performance , to parents and public .
13 If you 're buying a new computer screen it will now by law have to comply with European standards in terms of low radiation emissions and lack of screen flicker .
14 The Central Authority system has many advantages , but it can not of course ensure effective or speedy service .
15 It can not of course be the case that syntactic variables do not pattern socially or stylistically ; some of them plainly do , as the work of , for example , Cheshire has shown .
16 Although this proposition is unlikely ever to be falsified , nevertheless one can not maintain that it can not in principle be false .
17 It can not in reality be a rational actor in the game-theory sense of having a fixed order of priorities in its policy goals .
18 if the company resolves by extraordinary resolution to the effect that it can not by reason of its liabilities continue its business and that it is advisable to wind up .
19 It can also in effect make it impossible for them to participate in the community and thus deprives them of an important aspect of citizenship .
20 It must always involve an excess beyond the totality without which the totality could never be totalized , which must mean that it can never in fact be closed .
  Next page