Example sentences of "[pron] [vb mod] then be [vb pp] to " in BNC.
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1 | Written authorisation from the publisher is required for returns , which should then be sent to the warehouse address on the authorisation . |
2 | In that case the panel might recommend reductions in funding , which could then be applied to other areas . |
3 | Initially , the project had use of a very basic one which involved the manual counting of audible bleeps , which could then be averaged to counts per minute . |
4 | Jeffrey Sachs , a Harvard professor who advises the Russian government , argues that trade within the former Soviet Union would be made easier if each of the 15 republics had its own freely exchangeable currency , which could then be pegged to the rouble if any issuer were mad enough to do this . |
5 | The White Paper recognised that unscrupulous landlords might be tempted to harass existing tenants to force them out of the property , which could then be let to new tenants at the higher market rent , and in an effort to prevent this , the harassment provisions of the 1977 Protection from Eviction Act were strengthened and a new right of compensation — civil law damages-was introduced in cases of unlawful eviction . |
6 | It is submitted on behalf of the father and the grandmother that , if an order were not made , C. would go to the grandmother and the care which would then be given to him would not be care which would cause suffering of harm and that , therefore , the second limb of the threshold condition is not made out . |
7 | It was led by Tonu Anton and intended to write a new constitution by Nov. 15 which would then be put to referendum . |
8 | ( Indeed , some Soviet planners have speculated that it might be advantageous to license Western factories to produce Soviet equipment which would then be exported to the USSR . ) |
9 | It has been suggested that the club would pay Knighton £1m as compensation , which would then be added to the price-tag Midani would put on the Edwards stake . |
10 | If the DVLA co-operates , it could mail out surveys to car owners , which would then be returned to JD Power . |
11 | After due consideration , a reply to the SPR will be generated by SST in the form of an SSR , which will then be sent to the originator of the SPR . |
12 | This will leave the defence to raise the issue of consent , which will then be left to the jury . |
13 | The new twist is that addicts ( the programme serves 300–500 people a week ) will be given a telephone number they can call to request new needles , which will then be delivered to a pre-arranged meeting point . |
14 | Nevertheless , the universal aspirations of such a social psychology 's theory will permit the formulation of ‘ pure ’ , or universal , theoretical propositions , which can then be applied to historical manifestations of the topic in question . |
15 | A better and more organised way of handling the music feed , though , is to pre-record it onto a cued sound tape which can then be fed to the mixer non-stop . |
16 | Slop , arising from the assembly of components in their minimum metal condition or due to an estimated wear pattern , can be included to produce positional uncertainty in the mechanism , which can then be compared to the positional requirements necessary for correct operation . |
17 | In a similar vein , Dr M in Department B said that the first year is concerned with ‘ settling in and acquiring practice , and acquiring a certain body of common reading which can then be appealed to or built on in subsequent years ’ . |
18 | When you are giving tablets to your dog , it may be possible simply to disguise them in food , such as a piece of meat , which can then be added to the dog 's meal . |
19 | Thus the responsibility for unemployment would be seen to lie with the unemployed , who would then be seen to be personally responsible for their own unemployment , poverty , etc . |
20 | A V&A spokeswoman stressed the museum 's enthusiasm for the project , and felt that such a show would attract visitors not normally likely to visit the museum who would then be drawn to related exhibits in the permanent collection . |
21 | You will then be asked to rate that impression on an eight point scale rating from ‘ highly unfavourable impression ’ through to a ‘ highly favourable impression ’ . |
22 | We could then be recommended to people by them when their hotels were full . |
23 | For the party leaderships , of course , it is important to get representation across the board , so a Democrat Representative from a large State such as California may find that the Agriculture Committee contains sufficient California Democrats already , and he/she may then be allocated to the committee concerned with the work of the Department of the Interior instead . |
24 | For research purposes it is best to leave thin sections uncovered , as they may then be subjected to a variety of treatments including staining , etching , cathodoluminescence and microprobe work . |
25 | If the products satisfied this panel 's criteria , they would then be referred to an EC jury for further scrutiny , to ascertain whether the Commission 's " eco label " requirements are met . |
26 | You can also transfer ( upload ) stitch patterns from the knitting machine to DesignaKnit ; they can then be converted to the correct format for editing within the colour pattern section and integrating with your garment shapes . |
27 | They can then be referred to and used as a tool to facilitate such activities as decision making , monitoring and evaluation . |
28 | It may then be extended to non-zero Ri by saying provided that the conditions required for ( 21.27 ) are still fulfilled ( i.e. z is within the wall layer but outside the viscous sub-layer ) . |
29 | Paradoxically , if such a person were to fail to give notice , he might then be said to be committing an offence even though , because of the hypothesised publicity , it is most unlikely that the police will not already know about his proposed march . |
30 | On the contrary , a wide range of dispersal agents would allow a larger number of individuals to strip the tree of fruit at its prime and it would then be distributed to a wider range of habitats and be buffered against any disaster that might overcome the dispersal agent of a species relying on just one such agent . |