Example sentences of "which [modal v] [adv] be [prep] " in BNC.

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1 This could well relate to the design of the hospital bed which may not be at the same height as the one with which the patient is familiar .
2 Taking the early batches of eggs or fry away may interfere with the parents ' ability to raise later batches , so I leave a few batches with a new pair until they get the knack , which may not be at the first attempt .
3 But there is little room for a comprehensive view , though it gives the generalists a basis for comparisons which may not be at first apparent .
4 This body in turn can not compel the tip 's owners to clean up the area until regulations provided for in the 1990 Environmental Protection Act have come into force , which may not be until at least 1993 .
5 Drama training is under constant review through the accreditation system , so that standards are maintained and new developments assessed , and schools which may not be in the accredited list today may well be there soon .
6 In any large firm the managers have considerable scope for indulging in actions which may not be in the best interests of the owners , or for allowing their subordinates a freer rein than might be in the owners ' interests .
7 These spaces will overwrite any characters which may already be on the screen .
8 Automatic Teller Machine ( ATM ) cards , or other forms of plastic which may already be in your pocket , cost less and serve just as well , provided you do not stray too far from the beaten track .
9 The attention of members is drawn to a new Public Notice , 727 , dealing with various new VAT schemes for retailers , which may well be of interest to the clients of many members .
10 They are of two sorts — those which are an integral part of the book , printed on the same paper and gathered up for binding with the rest of the sections ( though they will usually be paged separately ) ; and leaves or sections printed separately , sometimes on different paper altogether , which may even be of a different size .
11 For a composite material consisting of a concentration of particles with orientation described by and elastic constants of a second phase , which may also be of general elastic properties , the Voigt scheme would lead to sums such as
12 The interests of the elderly person and the rest of the family network , which may sometimes be in competition .
13 It will inevitably by called ‘ blackthorn ’ , which should not be in flower for a month , bringing its ‘ winter ’ with it , and growing on short-jointed tangles of stems rather than on the slender longer shoots of these bushy trees .
14 This gives us a second combination of interest and income ( 10% and £40m. ) which must also be on the IS curve .
15 The knowledge they seek is experiential , and they lived in the expectation of a final reality which must inevitably be in itself a judgement on the existential awareness of it at a human level .
16 The anniversary of King George 's coronation , on 11 October , provided the occasion for great patriotic demonstrations , with at Newcastle , which might soon be in the front line , ‘ bonfires in several parts of the streets and beer given to the common people ’ .
17 Third , clients may need to be prepared to wait until the start of the next course , which might not be for up to two months .
18 which might not be at year end for example .
19 If the review of energy policy opts for a high coal burn , it will have to be balanced by maintaining ‘ clean ’ nuclear power plant which might also be under threat if the dash for gas is allowed to go unchecked .
20 This will require the hospital to levy a charge , which might initially be at nationally determined rates ’ ( DoH , 1989c , para.2. 18 ) .
21 Greg Dyke and I decided to explore the possibility of sponsorship , which could well be of great value in London Weekend Television 's long-term future .
22 In this case , the transfer is being made off a camcorder which is acting as the source-machine ; the record-machine is a VCR which need not be of the same format .
23 Local authorities will now have to divorce their regulatory arms from the disposal organisation by forming separate companies which would normally be in private hands .
24 However , at Foxton they are side-aligned ‘ pounds ’ rather than ‘ ponds ’ , designed to maintain a water supply to each lock , and contain the water which would normally be in the pound between each lock .
25 An improper and dominant motive would have to be shown for revealing matters which would normally be in the public interest .
26 Otherwise our credit society could easily go sour on us , with repercussions for the country 's industry and commerce which would not be to our benefit .
27 A neutralisation would act to perpetuate the balance of forces that formalised the agreement to neutralise , which would not be in the interest of those parties to the agreement who expect to upgrade their relative involvement in the region over their current level .
28 However , I am convinced that a further review of the industry at this stage would only create additional uncertainty , which would not be in the interests of the industry , the tenants or the customers .
29 It is not easy because , carried to extremes , it would be a dangerous policy which would not be unlike that of a bargain hunting housewife at a January sale who buys things she will never use because the price is right .
30 Hundreds of ordinary men and women are highly competent interviewers , and a glance at some of the very complex interview schedules used by market research firms and the government research agencies show that they are capable of carrying out very intricate interviews which would probably be beyond the capabilities of many untrained academics !
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