Example sentences of "that [adj] is to be " in BNC.

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1 But if there is a democratic vote for reform , the Secretary of State says that that is to be ignored .
2 I think that I think we 've agreed that that is to be taken on board by the
3 As a result , there is a continued shortage of residential care facilities for the full-time residence of mentally handicapped people which is perpetuating the need for mental handicap hospitals to house them , even though it is recognised by all parties that this is to be avoided at all costs .
4 It is only in the third- and fourth-session documents that this is to be found , and increasingly frequently , as , for instance , in chapter 13 of Lumen Gentium or in chapter 3 of the Decree on Missionary Activity , entitled ‘ Particular Churches ’ — a chapter written largely in the fourth session and one of the Council 's most mature texts .
5 Wherever it saves space , we shall always write a column vector x as unc the braces{} denote that this is to be read as a column .
6 … Whether , as a matter of expression , you say , as was said in the case of Watson v. Fram Reinforced Concrete Co . Ltd. , that this is to be explained by postulating a continuing duty , or merely projecting the relationship of duty into the future , or whether you regard it as possible to establish a breach of duty as at birth by reference to an act antecedent to the accrual of the cause of action , may be open to debate , but it has no bearing on the precise question we are called upon to answer , namely , whether the defendant owed a duty of care to the infant plaintiff .
7 Nor will it avail them to advance further money on a floating charge on the understanding that this is to be used to repay existing loans ; a creditor can not by use of the floating charge transmute an unsecured into a secured debt by attempting to manipulate the saving provisions of section 245 .
8 Clause 7 of Precedent 1 expressly specifies that this is to be the case .
9 For where it has been drawn is everywhere ; from the insistence of Thorndike , and the early behaviourists like Watson and Hull , that all is to be explained , including human behaviour , in terms of conditioned reflexes , to the open-handedness of well-meaning liberationists like Rollin who argue that even worms and sea anemones should be given the benefit of the doubt since we can not be certain that they do not feel pain and therefore have a consciousness ( 1981 : 31 ) .
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