Example sentences of "which [be] [adv] to be " in BNC.

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1 This represents the number of entries subsequent the specified print sequence number which are also to be proofed .
2 This represents the number of entries subsequent the specified print sequence number which are also to be cross-referenced .
3 Others have drawn attention to the weak political culture : ‘ I perceive the most significant structural defect of our democracy in the lethargy and apathy which are increasingly to be found within our parties and other groups …
4 " At the east end modern windows are made to the kitchen and chamber , over which are yet to be seen part of three antient lancet windows of the chancel , the center one somewhat higher and larger than the other two ; which were before the alterations deep and narrow .
5 The powerful stimulants of gastric acid secretion present in beer , which are yet to be identified , are thermostable and anionic polar substances .
6 Allowing for a level of coding somewhere between the highly specific and detailed CODOT scheme and that of OPCS , in which are sometimes to be found rather heterogeneous categories .
7 These restrictive measures , sponsored by Ramsay MacDonald , which are never to be forgotten or forgiven by the Labour party , were defended as the inevitable product of the continuing economic crises of the 1930s .
8 The Latin a priori becomes the odd-looking apriori , and that useful little vade-mecum becomes the much more cumbersome vadémécum ( complete with accents which are now to be added , where appropriate , to all borrowed Latin and foreign words , as in mémorandum , allégretto , édelweiss , pédigrée ) .
9 These provisions , which are now to be found in the Companies Act 1985 , Part X , require directors and other primary insiders to disclose their holdings and dealings in the company with whom they are connected by way of employment .
10 Some of the lessons learnt from the accidents were enshrined in safety laws which are now to be scrapped .
11 If we are to adopt a single currency , we must achieve the theoretical advantages which are there to be grasped .
12 There there are disciplinary procedures in in all schools erm which are there to be used .
13 It is also conceivable that there are still natural laws which are still to be discovered and named .
14 The Percys subsequently appear as lords of Leconfield , who built an 84 roomed castle west of Main Street , the old and original part of Leconfield , surrounded by a wide and deep moat , the remains of which are still to be seen .
15 James Harris , writing in 1751 , saw that ‘ all Conversation passes between Particulars or Individuals ’ , and argued that when , at the formative stages of human language , a speaker met another whose name he did not know he addressed him by using ‘ , that is , Pointing , or Indication by the Finger or Hand , some traces of which are still to be observed as a part of that Action which naturally attends our speaking ’ .
16 This being a self-acting incline the empty trucks were dragged up by the full ones , the long chain or rope to which they were linked , passing , of course , around the sheaved wheel the stanchions for which are still to be seen .
17 In the circumstances prevailing in industrial societies , with their mass parties , the only viable kind of democracy is what he called a ‘ plebiscitarian leader-democracy ’ , in which charismatic leaders set goals ‘ which are then to be ‘ sold ’ to the people at large by ‘ party machines ’ , and afterwards implemented with the help of administrative bureaucracies ' .
18 On July 23 , representatives of Zambia 's creditor countries , meeting in Paris , agreed in outline on a 50 per cent debt reduction scheme , the details of which were yet to be decided .
19 The restrictions governing such use which were shortly to be articulated by Gierek , Gomulka 's successor , provide the charter and justification for the military 's conduct in 1981 :
20 Holden and Holford 's City of London Plan put the seal on the principles of precinct planning and the canalization of traffic , crucial aspects of redevelopment which were soon to be seen in Coventry , Plymouth and elsewhere .
21 There were a number of warnings from RSGB which were included , and which were later to be added into the company prospectus .
22 It was the Controller of the Household who later established that no one in authority who was within a reasonable distance of the incident could have realised that the members of the first team of bearers , most of them worthy if nervous burghers of Kinsai , had doctored strung-up nerves with wine and k'miss to such an extent that they were no longer capable of reacting with either fortitude or common sense to the kind of diversions which were now to be expected as part of the rejoicing .
23 There was a small disturbance early yesterday , it emerges , at the famous entrance which is soon to be closed by Mrs Thatcher 's ornamental security gates .
24 Over the past 18 months more than 10 cases have come to light , one of which is soon to be pursued in court .
25 Can you manage to stick to a weight-loss programme when you have defined a time period , i.e. the three weeks until your holiday , or if you have to fit into certain clothes for a special occasion which is soon to be upon you , and do you generally find it difficult to stick to a diet for a longer period
26 Does my hon. Friend agree that our achievements in that aspect of education could not be better illustrated than by that which pertains in Nottinghamshire , where the university now has the highest ratio of applications to available places and where Nottingham polytechnic , which is soon to be a university , is planning to increase its capacity over the next couple of years to 16,000 student places ?
27 He is an expert in Package Dyeing ; a method which is soon to be introduced to the dyehouse as part of the new expansion scheme .
28 The new surgery was built though , inside a former psychiatric hospital , which is soon to be closed altogether .
29 In place of a fall from grace which is ultimately to be followed by a return to Paradise , we have the notion that mankind originally evolved out of a sub-human stage of bestiality .
30 There was also the possibility of a more flexible use of facilities in the statutory , voluntary and private sectors , and , finally , the powerful influence of doctors over the lives of the chronically disabled would inevitably wane , a process of ‘ de-medicalization ’ which is largely to be welcomed as medical and nursing skills are only a small part of the required professional skills .
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