Example sentences of "to be account for " in BNC.

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1 Why this should be so will be discussed in a moment but it does enable the other observations to be accounted for by a single theory .
2 Although evil could not be attributed to Ahura Mazdah , its existence had to be accounted for , and Zarathustra explained it in terms of free will .
3 During the remainder of the century some one-third of the increase in energy consumption in the LDCs is likely to be accounted for by oil which means a reduction in its proportion of consumption from 55% today to 43% by the year 2000 .
4 Very strict rules apply to those drugs which in the Act are called ‘ controlled drugs ’ ; each dose has to be accounted for in a Controlled Drugs Register , whether the drug is given in hospital or in the home .
5 There 's still a one and a half hour gap to be accounted for , and any link between Pinder and Dominic Wetherby would change the emphasis completely .
6 That leaves the other click to be accounted for .
7 Such combinations constitute formulaic patterns which are indeed of very frequent occurrence in language use and need to be accounted for ( as I mentioned in Chapter 3 ) but they can hardly be said to represent the total language to be taught .
8 The [ draft ] FRS requires such instruments to be accounted for wholly as a liability .
9 One major benefit immediately arising from these changes is that , as VAT will no longer need to be accounted for at UK sea or airports , EC deferment guarantees can be cancelled , creating an immediate cash flow improvement .
10 It is certainly not to be accounted for simply by the clerical abuses of the time .
11 There is therefore a need to question this assumption that aggression is a given element which somehow has to be accounted for .
12 Explicitly or implicitly , the various theories treat aggression as an absolute discrete ‘ thing ’ , which , when it appears to be absent in a particular society , has somehow to be accounted for .
13 It was as if the train journey itself , the old-fashioned intimate compartment in which they had found themselves , the freedom from interruptions and the tyranny of the telephone , the sense of time visibly flying , annihilated under the pounding wheels , not to be accounted for , had released both of them from a carefulness which had become so much a part of living that they were no longer aware of its weight until they let it slip from their shoulders .
14 If one is prepared to act on this view of the need for more extensive training and greater access to deaf people , there are still other series of factors concerning language learning to be accounted for .
15 The expenditure was to be accounted for by the master in his receipt book and under no circumstances was any officer to receive a gratuity .
16 How this shortfall is to be accounted for forms the focus of the survey and analysis which follow .
17 In any case , the effect occurred too rapidly to be accounted for by mutation accumulation .
18 Between times there are two other little Intel numbers that have to be accounted for : the P54 , which could be a P5 in 80486 clothing but we 're not sure yet , and the P67 , which looks to be a 1994 transition chip between the P6 and P7 .
19 A number of studies ( see , for example , Draper et al have suggested that childhood leukaemia is more common among higher socioeconomic groups , and it has also been suggested that the risk of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia is doubled in isolated towns and villages , but the excess in Seascale is too large to be accounted for in these ways .
20 This type of linguistic material is sometimes described as ‘ performance-data ’ and may contain features such as hesitations , slips , and non-standard forms which a linguist like Chomsky ( 1965 ) believed should not have to be accounted for in the grammar of a language .
21 But where , as here , the regime exercises virtually no administrative control at all in the territory of the state , international recognition of an unconstitutional regime should not suffice and would , indeed , have to be accounted for by policy considerations rather than legal characterisation ; and it is , of course , possible for states to have relations with bodies which are not states or governments of states .
22 So I mean think about it as long term planning , and certainly for those under er sixty the long term becomes extremely long term because er you know you 're looking at perhaps a third of your life er which is er still to be accounted for .
23 Finally , the outputs of the production system need to be accounted for , invoiced and delivered ( to the customer or into stock ) .
24 Roughly four-fifths is thought to move as bed load including saltation , leaving only one-fifth to be accounted for by suspension .
25 summarized statements of income and expenditure of each fund or undertaking required by law to be accounted for separately ;
26 Having clarified the relevant facts to be accounted for , the second step is to formulate and test models of the Northern Ireland labour market .
27 Foreign exchange earnings were planned to total $90,000 million , with $83,000 million of this to be accounted for by earnings from oil and gas exports .
28 The public-sector borrowing requirement ( PSBR ) remained high , at 9.5 per cent of GNP in 1990 ; 4.5 per cent of the total PSBR was said to be accounted for by the deficits of inefficient public enterprises .
29 A lawyer , Jorge Cartagena , who had represented some of the Sendero leaders , claimed that more than 150 people had still to be accounted for .
30 So the ultracold collisions are unlikely to provide a fundamental limit on the fountain experiments , at least in the near future , although they will certainly need to be accounted for in some way .
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