Example sentences of "[conj] [vb mod] [adv] [adv] be [vb pp] " in BNC.
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1 | This will record any restrictive covenants that may be set out in full in the body of the certificate or may more commonly be referred to in a transfer deed , which may be sewn into the back of the certificate . |
2 | A counter-notice which must be served within 21 days after service of the Notice , should only be given where it is required that the party whose statement it is sought to admit , should be called as a witness , but there are witnesses who can not , or should not be called , that is if dead , beyond the seas , or unfit to attend , or who can not after reasonable diligence be identified , or can not reasonably be expected to have any recollection ; consequently in respect of all those persons , the opposing party is not entitled to serve a counter-notice requiring such person to be called unless he can contend that the person can , or should be called . |
3 | ‘ This is the sort of tournament that should not even be considered as a Ryder Cup qualifier . |
4 | This may not be an accurate assessment of the family dynamic , but the re-labelling of the problem does enable the family to focus on a problem that might not otherwise be considered , the effect of one caring relationship on another . |
5 | Clearly there may well be more than an element of exaggeration in this insistence , but it makes more sense if we accept their view that a great many features of literature that might not normally be recognized , at least at first sight , as terms of a comparison , nonetheless have a metaphorical or analogical function . |
6 | In the presence of perfect capital markets and suitably inclusive definitions , wealth would simply be the discounted present value of all future income streams ( i.e. including those that might not easily be measured in money terms ) . |
7 | The coalition group has agreed on nothing that could even loosely be termed an election platform , let alone a policy for governing the country . |
8 | The Pan Am bombing , he said , was part of a consistent pattern of Libyan-sponsored terrorism that could no longer be ignored . |
9 | It was after the Revolution that Gould first came to prominence when he became one of the largest suppliers of hemp , pitch , and tar to the Royal Navy ; and in this capacity , immediately before the War of the Spanish Succession , he played an important part in providing the navy with Russian hemp from Archangel in place of the supplies that could no longer be obtained from Riga ( beleaguered by the Russians ) . |
10 | Faced with a demand that could no longer be met , the Moscow city fathers 10 days ago limited purchases to one item per person . |
11 | Such positive feedback can occur because the original design was not sufficiently careful or because of additional phase shifts that could not reasonably be foreseen . |
12 | Only where the foreigner brought in technology that could not otherwise be obtained or where the firm exported the great bulk of its output were these constraints relaxed . |
13 | This assumption is arbitrary , but no more so than the assertion that reminder treatments somehow make available information that could not otherwise be retrieved . |
14 | We created works of art that could not even be imagined by lesser races ; we pushed our bodies even further and devised whole new theories and systems to improve our way of life . |
15 | The radio version of The Hitchhiker' ’ Guide to the Galaxy had this freedom that could not quite be translated onto television . |
16 | It was a hopeless love and one that could not possibly be reciprocated . |
17 | However , other difficulties remained : sentences that could not readily be decomposed into ’ SUBJECT and PREDICATE ’ form also proved troublesome . |
18 | Two other factors are worth mentioning here because they are often given as reasons for dispersals that could not obviously be justified otherwise . |
19 | I can feel that there are forces in here that could very easily be woken and , if they are woken , they would come crawling and slithering out from their lair and we would not have very much chance against them … |
20 | But there was one loss that could never again be supplied to him : he had lost the sight of his damaged eye . |
21 | Some departments offer opportunities for supervised study that need not necessarily be undertaken as study for a degree or other qualification . |
22 | In particular , the Partnership can help to lever funds from other organizations into inner-city investment projects ; it can assist in the creation of innovative approaches towards inner-urban renewal ; and it can operate as a last-resort funding for worthwhile projects that would not otherwise be implemented . |
23 | The City Grant will be given to private-sector development projects that would not otherwise be implemented , and that can benefit run-down inner-city areas at reasonable cost . |
24 | Many business issues manifestly demand knowledge that would not normally be possessed by the lay person , for example , concerning the risks inherent in marketing new products , the techniques for maintaining cash-flow , or the steps that should be taken to guard against currency fluctuations , not to mention technical issues specific to particular industries . |
25 | There are several techniques that might be used in international marketing research that would not normally be used for research into ‘ domestic ’ markets . |
26 | With sufficient funds to travel to many active libraries , it enables the British Library Information Officer for User Education to make more personal contact , and thus frequently acquire information that would otherwise not be volunteered or made public . |
27 | It 's certainly fun as well as being easy to use and , in the right hands , can produce stunning results that would probably never be attempted by conventional methods . |
28 | Erm it 's a community isolation because is like mountains around which makes barriers against physical mobility that ca n't really be moved round that easily . |
29 | The only factor that ca n't really be accounted for is time . |
30 | ‘ Certainly its aims are noble , but it is a large institution with vast hoards of treasures that will probably never be shown to the public . |