Example sentences of "[coord] these have [adv] been [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | The United Kingdom Government has shared the Committee 's reservations as to the excessive use of Article 118A , and these have also been supported by other Member States in the Council . |
2 | Charles Dollar of the National Archives and Records Administration ( NARA ) ( USA ) wrote some early studies ( e.g. 1971 ) and these have now been followed by numerous articles in Archivaria , American Archivist , the publication of special reports , and the summaries of meetings ( e.g. Research Issues … 1991 ) . |
3 | ‘ There were totally unacceptably delays and quite recently the Boards lodged a full statement of claims with lawyers for McDonnell Douglas , They have asked for more details , and these have now been given . |
4 | Only small numbers of the short-lived MIPS-based product line were sold , and these have now been withdrawn . |
5 | There is a long history in the use of case management within rehabilitation services in North America and these have usually been based on psychosocial models in psychiatric rehabilitation . |
6 | When Menelik founded Addis Ababa in 1889 the countryside had been forested with juniper and wild olive , but these had soon been cut down for firewood and building material , whereupon Menelik announced that he was going to move his capital for the third time . |
7 | Simple mixers can in fact be made up cheaply by enthusiasts from published circuits , but these have largely been supplanted by modestly priced commercial units which incorporate battery or mains-fed circuitry capable of delivering better balanced outputs of higher quality . |
8 | Licence and the exercise of a right of distress are two common defences to an action for conversion but these have already been considered in relation to trespass to land . |
9 | Kay mentions ideas posited by various groups such as promoting ‘ sex cards ’ certifying alleged freedom from HIV infection ; stamps or tattoos to identify HIV-infected people ; or a type of quarantine in which HIV-infected persons may live in society yet could not marry , be employed or travel ; but these have all been rejected as unenforceable or unethical or unacceptable . |