Example sentences of "there [modal v] [adv] always " in BNC.

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1 There may not always be Summers Of Love , winters of Punk , Acid House explosions and Madchester madnesses , but there is always great and exciting ( new and old ) music out there .
2 there will presumably always be value in having temporary organizations outside the permanent government service that can be scrapped when chances permit ;
3 There will also always be accidental occurrences during the period from conception to birth , and errors during and after birth .
4 There will probably always remain a real inequality of races , as there is always inequality of individuals .
5 However , she concedes that there will probably always be people who choose to work outside the mainstream , though they may not be formally organised or funded in the future .
6 There will not always be critics and the rest , just as there will not always be man and the rest .
7 There will not always be critics and the rest , just as there will not always be man and the rest .
8 In the world outside school there will not always be a teacher around to point out weaknesses and suggest improvements in children 's information-handling .
9 There will nearly always be problems when taking on a rescued dog , but with determination and good will on both sides , there are very few that ca n't be solved .
10 Both restrictive and non-restrictive adjectives in sentences such as ( 3 ) are alike in that they instantiate the P in : ( 6 ) [ P E ] The difference between the two possibilities is solely that , in cases of non-restriction , the speaker is aware that the identification carried out by the noun phrase as a whole is the same as it would be if the adjective ( limiting ourselves to adjectival instances ) were not present ; in essence , we have the situation as in ( 7 ) ( where the sign =i obviously stands for equality on the parameter of identification , and not for the intensional relation of equation ) : ( 7 ) In practice , the situation is almost always somewhat more complicated in English , because there will nearly always be a determiner ; thus the non-restrictive status of the adjective in the subject phrase of ( 8 ) can be represented by the formula ( 9 ) , with Pb as the adjectival property and Pc as the property inherent in the noun ( while Pa represents the word this ) : ( 8 ) this Christian Pope committed most unchristian acts ( 9 ) Nevertheless , the presence of other elements in a noun phrase beside the non-restrictive adjective and the noun itself in no way alters the principle involved .
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