Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] the full " in BNC.

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1 In the Cleveland Report , the British Association of Social Workers is reported as stating that it is absolutely essential that those involved with the family should conduct the fullest assessment of the family background .
2 Time is short , but we must mobilise the full strength of our membership to try to ensure that the Bill is brought forward quickly .
3 To comprehend all that was involved here , one must experience the full force of tragedy at first hand ; and here Act III of Tristan can be pointed to as a prime specimen of tragic art .
4 The insurance should cover the full cost of rebuilding and reinstatement from time to time , although it is accepted that a covenant to insure for the " full cost of reinstatement " will be construed as meaning the cost of reinstatement at the time when reinstatement actually takes place , as opposed to the date when the premium is paid , or any other date .
5 Omar Pound must know the full story , but rightly I think , though surely austerely , he has left it for us to piece together .
6 We are determined that everyone lawfully settled in this country should enjoy the full range of opportunities in our society .
7 Sir : The ongoing debate about the suggestion by the Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals ( CVCP ) that universities must identify the full costs of their undergraduate programmes and should examine various ways in which these costs might be met seems to me to have largely missed the main point at issue .
8 In this sense the steady state may be a poor approximation , and we should study the full equilibrium path .
9 This means that in order to slay the Grand Theogonist the enemy must inflict the full 3 wounds on him before the end of the next shooting or hand-to-hand combat phase .
10 Concatenating the two together should give the full pathname of the Process Directory , and you should have read and write access to that directory .
11 The only history that the critic must master is the history of words ; he must grasp the full historical meaning of the language used in the text , including all its associations , and of the names to which reference may be made , but only to the extent that their meaning is a matter of public record about the culture in which the text was produced .
12 But before we go we must understand the full import of what we have seen .
13 You must move the full distance possible .
14 It has long been established in England and Wales that the schools should have the fullest possible measure of responsibility for their own work , including responsibility for their own curriculum and teaching methods which should be evolved by their own staff to meet the needs of their own pupils .
15 In keeping with its standing as an independent body with a built-in majority of teachers , the Council was committed to the thesis that ‘ each school should have the fullest measure of responsibility for its own curriculum and teaching methods based on the needs of its own pupils and evolved by its own staff ’ .
16 There was evident a very strong determination on the part of Prof. Barker to remove all obstacles likely to prevent agreement being reached and , in the course of a subsequent conversation with Elvin , he said that he had recently come to the conclusion that it was of primary importance that the WEA should have the full assistance of the Extra-Mural Board in all its work throughout the whole of this District .
17 It only has the force of a recommended practice whereas I believe it should have the full force of a standard , but at least it is there and perhaps in the fullness of time it may attain higher status .
18 It is the difference between a necessary empirical shift , when reasoning is taken across to one of its presumed objects and must take the full strain of the encounter , and a deceptive ( because falsely generalized ) empiricism , in which certain kinds of attention to certain presumptively autonomous objects are held to be justified and protected by the terms of an unargued immediacy .
19 Mr Meacher said provided there had been a majority ballot decision trade unions must have the full protection of the law to pursue a lawful trade dispute .
20 It is also right that consumers should pay the full price of the advantages they will enjoy as a result of genetic engineering .
21 If you are booking within 8 weeks of departure you must pay the full cost of your holiday immediately .
22 ‘ Roger Shallot , ’ the magistrate thundered , ‘ we find you guilty of these terrible murders and so you must pay the full penalty of the law .
23 Note that you must supply the FULL pathname of the configuration file you created in Section 2.4 , and you must put the colon on the end of SYS$LIFESPAN :
24 You must supply the full textual or numeric UIC , with square brackets , and the total field must be 20 characters or less .
25 In his Lordship 's view , the wife should receive the full sum and in due course account to the Revenue for any tax due .
26 The majority of clients would need to have their debts rescheduled , and it was important that the companies should receive the full picture .
27 Companies do not have to list their directors on their stationery , but if they do they must list the full name ( or the surname and initials of forenames ) of every individual and corporate director .
28 The amount attributed to non-equity interests is not to be confined to the nominal value of the shares , but should reflect the full consideration received , together with any accrued premium for redemption .
29 Pupils must wear the full , correct school uniform .
30 It should house the full complement of technical guides , manuals and publications .
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