Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [modal v] be [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | So er to get to your question erm I 've sort of not been doing anything erm I was hoping that I would be sort of fully fit round about now and then if I saw something on teletext er that was good I 'd just buzz off for a week or so . |
2 | Later it had to be accepted that she would be wheelchair bound for the rest of her life . |
3 | Her plans were overthrown the first day when the president requested that she should be chaplain . |
4 | Remembering Lucy Lane 's description , he felt sure that she must be Anna 's mother . |
5 | We hope that you will be bale to come and we look forward to meeting you then . |
6 | Of course we have the additional complication that the over- large government bureaucracy 's at present run by a political party which seems to have given up thinking about anything much other than staying in power and I know and hope that you will be part of thinking about much more than that , but still even with a large union , you could regulate concentrate on stimulating the grass roots and then on building upwards . |
7 | And we pray for ourselves , that we may be peacemakers in the world that Jesus came to save , in whose name we pray , Amen |
8 | It seems to me that all that we would be doing would be substituting one area for another in effect in terms of where that development is attracted from . |
9 | The translucent message from the corridors of power , in Europe and in Whitehall , is that a single currency will be established , and that we shall be part of it . |
10 | Following the December 1991 European Community summit at Maastricht , there is a consensus among all three major UK parties that we must be part of the process leading to monetary union . |
11 | In a letter , probably written at Stirling in April 1304 , Edward I referred to letters from Philip the Fair ‘ in which you [ Philip ] have asked us that we should be débonaires and merciful [ merciables ] ’ to the Scots who were about to meet him . |
12 | erm So therefore , we 're embarking on a new area if you like , in so far as not just sponsorship , but erm willingness to participate in a friendly environment , and I would hope that we can be part of that . |
13 | The objection was that we can be right or wrong in what we judge , but that it makes no sense to talk of something imprinted , an impression or sensation , being right or wrong . |
14 | One-Year courses represented a prestigious category and the formal requirements for grant-aid were similar to those for preparatory Tutorial Classes without the expectation that they would be precursors of three-year Tutorial Classes . |
15 | Sam could not see exactly what they were , but he knew that they would be lions with their heads between their paws . |
16 | Cassie could n't see her eyes , but she was sure that they would be almond shaped and green , to go with the sexy red hair and double-cream complexion . |
17 | From the family holiday in Tunisia , to come and stay with Jay — no question that they would be lovers ! |
18 | The man she was here to interview had suggested she call him Ven , had even , if jokingly , suggested that they might be friends . |
19 | I 'm worried that they might be school maths teachers ; but the really terrifying prospect is that they might be designers of ships or bridges . |
20 | I 'm worried that they might be school maths teachers ; but the really terrifying prospect is that they might be designers of ships or bridges . |
21 | I read in Acts 1 how Jesus promised the Holy Spirit to the disciples so that they might be witnesses . |
22 | Other addictive relationships such as some sexual practices may be branded by society as being definitely abnormal or even criminal , yet there is evidence that they may be part of the broad spectrum of addictive disease and therefore outside the personal control of the individual sufferer . |
23 | Clothes and personal effects may only be seized if the custody officer : ( a ) believes that the person from whom they are seized may use them : ( i ) to cause physical injury to himself or another ; ( ii ) to damage property ; ( iii ) to interfere with evidence ; ( iv ) to assist him to escape ; or ( b ) has reasonable grounds for believing that they may be evidence relating to an offence . |
24 | But he is also aware that they may be conceptions of the good life for people generally and for society as a whole . |
25 | Pray that they may be people who rely on God 's healing and allow him to set them back on the track of feeding the lambs . |
26 | While all women are socialized for domesticity in much the same way — by identifying with their mothers ( and/or other adult women ) as housewives , internalizing the conviction that they must be housewives in their turn — for the working-class woman the linguistic process of role learning is such that ‘ I ’ becomes part of the role . |
27 | There is at least this restriction on the properties that count here , that they must be properties whose presence or absence can be registered by the person making the judgement . |
28 | They now had no idea where they were except that they must be east of the Ridgery and well to the west of where they believed the outlaws ' Camp to be . |
29 | They now had no idea where they were except that they must be east of the Ridgery and well to the west of where they believed the outlaws ' Camp to be . |
30 | The point was that they should be managers who took responsibility for securing the best service to the patient and could be held to account if there was failure . |