Example sentences of "be bring [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 All cameras sold prior to these improvements will be brought up to the new specifications entirely free of charge .
2 In short , all existing and future minerals planning permissions must be brought up to the environmental standards expected today , and provision must be made for a regular upgrading of standards in the future .
3 This means that a higher proportion of children will be brought up in the local authority sector than figures for the distribution of tenure in their parents ' age-band would suggest .
4 She has never abused her position while appearing determined that her sons will be brought up in the sensitive , caring manner denied to their father .
5 He should be brought in at the earliest stages to advise on venues — which would save time , money and frustration .
6 What a complete condemnation of the Thatcherite policies that were attempted to be brought in by the controlling group opposite .
7 It will be interesting to see whether Japanese management practices likely to be brought in by the new top management will work in an environment where aggressive individual success , rather than collaborative teamwork has been the norm .
8 Conception was to be brought about by the creative power of God , through the Holy Spirit .
9 The Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto in his book , The Other Path , argues that such change can be brought about in the Latin American context by legalizing the informals .
10 These points , figures , and analogies must be fixed in the memory so that they can be brought out at the appropriate moment .
11 Several grass-roots supporters want their concern about interest rates and higher mortgages to be brought out in the open tomorrow when Mr Lawson replies to the debate on the economy .
12 The reasonableness of bringing some element of quality into even a strictly hedonistic system may be brought out by the following thought experiment .
13 The accidental factor , that belonged to the past , was the leadership of the aristocracy : in the later nineteenth century the sans culottes of Madrid streets could not be brought out by the traditional symbiotic relationship of aristocratic employers and plebeian clientele .
14 If Haser could be brought down by the Swiss for money-laundering , so the theory went , then he would have no reason to dig the hole he was in any deeper by embarrassing the CIA with gratuitous revelations about the agency 's arms deals with Saddam Hussein .
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