Example sentences of "[pron] must [adv] [be] [vb pp] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 So that was where mother had kept all that string from parcels which must not be discarded lest it be needed .
2 It is obvious that those doctors who practised the therapeutic community approach had doubts about the complete integration of psychiatric patients into general hospitals , which must perforce be organized and run in a radically different manner .
3 So Eddy 's discovery should imply that the Sun is merely in a temporary phase of contraction , which must soon be halted and reversed .
4 Unpasteurised milk , such as used for Gospel Green cheese , will curdle naturally through the action of the bacteria that is present when the milk is heated , but the addition of the starter culture , which must always be used when cheese is made from pasteurised milk , hastens the process .
5 All the creatures that we have to kill and eat , all those that we have to strike down and destroy to make clothes for ourselves , have souls , like we have , souls that do not perish with the body , and which must therefore be propitiated lest they should avenge themselves on us for taking away their bodies ( see Rasmussen , 1929 ) .
6 So you must n't be bruised and disappointed because your impeccable piece is turned down .
7 She must still be fed and clothed , and soon a decision must be made about a secondary school , with its uniform and other details .
8 They must be considered reasonable by the parties to them at the time of entering into the contract and they must also be seen as reasonable from an objective point of view .
9 They must also be performed and co-ordinated with the occupational gestures that belong to the location and that are employed by the particular inhabitants whose story , with its moods , emotions and actions , is being told .
10 They must not be bought or sold or even taken or given as a present .
11 Most of them have been accidentally obtained from seeds so they must not be esteemed as different species , therefore I shall only insert their common names by which they are known in gardens , that those who are inclined to collect all the varieties may be at no loss for their titles .
12 They must not be forgotten for they gave their lives in defence of values which are under more bitter attack now all over the world than ever before . ’
13 Here the needing and the daring are situated in time as realities , and as such they must necessarily be conceived as occupying a before-position with respect to do and turn , as a need calling for action and an exercising of audacity leading to the achieving of a result .
14 Goody , however , claims that if the processes of political scepticism do occur at all in non-literate societies , they must always be limited and individual .
15 In addition they must always be muzzled and leashed when taken out in public and owners , who must have third party insurance , have to take adequate precautions to stop dogs escaping .
16 Moreover , if a pilot decides not to launch in a situation like this , he must never be overruled or criticised for playing it safe .
17 At the risk of wearying the reader it must again be stated that some degree of incestuous feeling exists in most if not all parents and children .
18 To do the navy justice , however , it must again be emphasised that powerful interest could rarely secure promotion for the unqualified , and in the naval service some ability was a prerequisite for advancement .
19 Sexual problems of the child may stem from any of the above considerations , although it must again be stressed that they are not inevitable .
20 It must not be shackled or restricted .
21 Thus education was to be productive of a ‘ good ’ , politically respectable State ; but it must not be seen as instrumental in any narrow or vocational way .
22 It must not be assumed that the absence of a 24-hour rhythm in newborn babies means that they have no rhythms at all .
23 It must not be assumed that the most likely date is in the centre of the range ; to quantify the distribution of the calendar dates , one of the probability methods ( which require computerisation ) must be used .
24 Although owning a car is common today , it must not be assumed that all nurses can provide their own transport .
25 However , at present it must not be assumed that sales always produce immediate problems .
26 So also , it must not be assumed that Ministers and civil servants regard judicial decisions as necessarily embodying the ultimate wisdom , especially where those decisions limit their powers .
27 The lists of items in Categories I , II , III and IV are not exhaustive , and it must not be assumed that items of storage not specifically mentioned are regarded automatically as coming under Category I. In general , items under Categories II , III and IV are those where experience has shown that the materials produce exceptionally intense firms with the high rate of heat release .
28 It must not be assumed that everyone wishes to participate — ‘ active citizenship ’ ( to use one of the Conservative Party 's catchphrases ) is not for everyone .
29 It must not be assumed that everyone initially agrees about the implications .
30 It must not be concluded that the Sahara was well watered in the Pleistocene : it probably had a hot steppe type climate rather than a true desert climate as at present .
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