Example sentences of "order to be [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Fathers-to-be attended the ante-natal clinics and classes — typically taken by a tough and childless instructress — in order to be taught breathing exercises and given labour notes for the day .
2 The government must give the necessary guarantees to enable the Omani order to be placed .
3 Although some fertility clinics have offered counselling in recent years , it is only as a result of the new legislation that all clinics have to employ counsellors in order to be licensed .
4 Men were bellowing fortissimo women screaming in order to be heard but Charity 's voice was cutting through the uproar effortlessly .
5 There 've been some er conversations between the players out on the pitch and an Italian journalist who clearly does n't need a microphone in order to be heard .
6 Fowles 's finest novel , The French Lieutenant 's Woman ( 1969 ) , is decorated with parodistic devices far less integral than in Joyce 's Ulysses , as if a technique needed to be aped and mocked in order to be exorcised .
7 This involved looking up the ailments common to exotic animals in order to be prepared for any searching questions by the proprietor .
8 However , the therapist will benefit from being able to discuss the case with other members of the team or a supervisor in order to be given support and guidance .
9 In order to be given full credit as CPE , reading should be technical rather than general .
10 There is no requirement that a person holds a qualification from the Institute in order to be employed as a legal executive .
11 Although leave was given for the service of the writ , Scott J. was unwilling to allow the Anton Piller order to be served ( and immediately executed ) at the same time .
12 What they had in common was that they were all perceived by the development officers as requiring a good deal of care in order to be sustained at home , and as not having all those care needs filled by either informal or statutory carers .
13 The manufacturer could impose full-line forcing , obliging the retailer to take a whole range of its products if it takes one , or tie-in sales , no X sold without Y. It could impose exclusive purchasing ( no products of a certain description to be bought from anywhere but itself ) , and may offer selective and exclusive distribution agreements ( suppliers have to meet certain criteria in order to be selected to distribute a product , and may be offered an exclusive territory or even absolute territorial protection ) .
14 ‘ The point ’ they say , ‘ is not that we should recognise semantic change , but that in order to be precise , in order to be understood , we must ’ .
15 But in order to be understood it needs to be seen within its original context of faith in one God who can only be spoken about by using metaphorical language .
16 Faxes can be saved in order to be printed later or can be sent to other system subscribers — again using the keypad on a touch tone phone .
17 The rats have to turn in a certain direction in a T-maze in order not to be electrically shocked or in order to be fed .
18 Associative learning , often called conditioning , has been studied in two forms , illustrated by Pavlov 's dogs , and pigeons learning to peck at discs in order to be fed .
19 It only seeks relationships in order to be loved .
20 She did n't come to work in order to be loved . ’
21 It enables a final order to be disturbed should justice require .
22 In order to be elected , a constituency candidate needs only a plurality of the votes cast .
23 Although this arrangement breaks somewhat with tradition , it is well within the PA constitution , which requires only that a candidate be an ‘ employee , partner , director or manager ’ of a member company in order to be elected as an officer .
24 The nature of the disciplinary sanctions on which the system rests is that the modern MP is heavily reliant on the support of party activists and party finance in order to be elected .
25 Alternatively , it can be the result of a public campaign , as with the repeal of the ‘ sus ’ law which was repealed because of public pressure , but allowed public order to be maintained through other laws .
26 ‘ ( 2 ) In the light of the provisions and principles of Community law and in particular ( but without limitation ) the principle of non-discrimination on grounds of nationality , the right of establishment and the requirement of proportionality , is a member state entitled to stipulate that in order to be registered in and entitled to fly the flag of that member state , a fishing vessel : ( a ) must have its legal title vested as to 100 per cent .
27 ‘ ( 2 ) In the light of the provisions and principles of Community law and in particular ( but without limitation ) the principle of non-discrimination on grounds of nationality , the right of establishment and the requirement of proportionality , is a member state entitled to stipulate that in order to be registered in and entitled to fly the flag of that member state , a fishing vessel : ( a ) must have its legal title vested as to 100 per cent .
28 So , whilst in the foregoing passage repressed homosexuality is construed as a cause of a violent and neurotic racism , elsewhere Fanon regards manifest homosexuality as an effect of the same neurotic racism , though now in a masochistic rather than a sadistic form , and especially the masochistic relation of the white man to the black man : ‘ There are , for instance , men who go to ‘ houses ' ’ in order to be beaten by negroes ; passive homosexuals who insist on black partners ' ( pp. 158 , 156 , 177 ) .
29 There , as Marx had noted , slaves are often classed with women and children and are often obtained in order to be adopted by people without descendants .
30 Like its predecessor , in order to be adopted the new package — known initially as the Pearson Accord and latterly as the Charlottetown Agreement — required ratification by the federal parliament and by individual provincial legislatures .
  Next page