Example sentences of "be [adj] [verb] [adv] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Digital signatures are possible using presently available technology , in particular the RSA cipher , and in spite of the technical complexity will provide sufficient information to permit proof that the document is indeed authentic .
2 I am sorry to observe so little Care taken of the Education of our Youth designed for the Sea , even such as have a Prospect of commanding Ships either in the Government or Merchant Service : The element in which they live renders them rough and boisterous which makes a little Education more necessary to give them an early Byass .
3 Why is it that governments are so concerned about high inflation rates that they are prepared to put so much effort into its control and even tolerate a rise in unemployment ?
4 She 'd been fortunate to escape more serious injury from the flying glass .
5 ‘ It 's been tremendous to feel so much love and support . ’
6 Home Office pathologist Dr Donald Wayte , of Bangor , told the court yesterday that it would probably have been impossible to get so much material into Mrs McMullen 's mouth if she had been conscious , as she would have been fighting for her life .
7 You 're right to want more Conventional RAM as it will allow you to run bigger programs — some games wo n't run with less than 610Kb of free RAM .
8 ‘ You 're lucky to have so much freedom . ’
9 On the level of er drugs and alcohol though we 're concerned to provide more social work time and support for the voluntary er agencies that are working in this field and also to provide direct services to people who are using drugs .
10 Er they 're both given very good performance .
11 In June , the bishops are due to meet again and are likely to publish more detailed guidance on the new arrangements .
12 In non-ELT materials you can look for situations which are likely to feature highly predictable language : scenes set in restaurants or shops , at parties , the reception desk or the dining table can sometimes be picked out of a longer programme and used in isolation to give an example of particular language functions in operation .
13 The result was that ‘ only in London is there convincing evidence that educationally disadvantaged pupils are likely to receive slightly higher expenditure . ’
14 It is not exhaustive , of course , but is rather a list of " good bets " : categories which in our experience , are likely to yield stylistically relevant information .
15 They are likely to need very careful handling if their substitute parents are to establish a happy relationship with them .
16 However , the remedies for avoiding common solutions , for example a positivity constraint on one branch , are likely to involve more additional computation time than their use would save .
17 Pupils with learning difficulties , with or without statements , are likely to make only slow progress with reading and writing .
18 Imports are likely to grow as loss-making capacity is reduced .
19 Medium-sized funds may have a small proportion invested in managed funds , with the majority of assets in its direct control , large pension funds are likely to have totally direct control , whilst smaller funds may simply invest in a range of managed policies .
20 Lay estates , by contrast , are likely to show perhaps greater diversity , but there may be less information from which to reconstruct the pre-Conquest arrangements .
21 Unpalatable conclusions are likely to require more substantial evidence than this technique can provide .
22 Neighbourhood police are supposed to spend as much time as possible per shift walking their beat , even taking tea-breaks at some appropriate place on the round , returning to the station only for their main meal break and when a criminal , such as a shoplifter , is apprehended , although this is rare .
23 She 'd been glad to find so much work waiting for her when she arrived back in England .
24 Colin Calderwood says that everywhere you go people stop and wave and that 's very nice but it 's been good to get away this week but now they 're back in town the pressure will start to build
25 We ca n't we devise publishing concepts which capture children 's imaginations in such a way that they are confident to spend as much time talking about what they have been reading as they are about last night 's episode of ‘ Neighbours ’ ?
26 and i if , I mean i if you take 's argument , if you take 's argument , they are all to do with , with provinces in the south and , and the argument is that here we have , we are looking at a commercialized viable economy and both and and for example are all arguing really that landlordism is not the problem the problem is that you , you , you , you you need to go further in terms of commercialization and that that , and that 's the way to go .
27 Most employers are reluctant to pay too much attention to personal circumstances , such as marital status or domestic problems when arriving at redundancy decisions .
28 The next time they are able to gather together enough courage to set out for the supermarket they may get only as far as point B before they have had enough , anticipating more extreme levels of anxiety if they continue .
29 With our stage and our workshops , which are better than any theatre in the world , we are able to achieve really striking stage pictures ; and they have nothing to do with these modern productions that do everything contrary to the music .
30 Their kidneys are able to produce very concentrated urine .
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