Example sentences of "they [vb mod] [adv] [be] [vb pp] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The concern is expressed on behalf of defendants in custody because they may ultimately be acquitted or given non-custodial sentences , and on behalf of defendants on bail because of the uncertainty and unpleasantness of a pending criminal trial .
2 They may even be taught that the mind is organised around this kind of contrast , which is ‘ natural ’ in language and thought .
3 Least successful so far in winning customers has been the Eucom joint venture between France Telecom and the Deutsche Bundespost Telekom , but even they may well be welcomed as WorldPartners by AT&T , despite the heavy whiff of state bureaucracy that hangs over both of them .
4 They may also be excluded because they are not entitled to benefits , do not register for work , or do not define themselves as unemployed .
5 They may also be taken as valuable additions to courses which do not specifically include them .
6 Using this approach it is not necessary to resolve alternative interpretations immediately — they may instead be maintained until their combination with other constraints produces in a single interpretation .
7 By contrast with Godwin and his circle , who grew out of a broad and rising general formation , at first not in critical relations with its own class , the Pre-Raphaelites , who were in majority from families of the commercial bourgeoisie , were in conscious opposition to the main cultural tendencies of their class , though they may finally be seen as articulating and expressing them .
8 It should be noted that chromosomally abnormal eggs frequently lag in development as compared with their normal counterparts ( 6 ) and if they become amitotic , it is possible they may either be misrepresented or excluded from a scored sample .
9 They may sometimes be emitted when matter particles interact with each other by exchanging virtual force-carrying particles .
10 Though should such attitudes give rise to negative responses in others , they may then be challenged and with adult maturity undergo some real and positive modification .
11 They must be considered reasonable by the parties to them at the time of entering into the contract and they must also be seen as reasonable from an objective point of view .
12 They must also be performed and co-ordinated with the occupational gestures that belong to the location and that are employed by the particular inhabitants whose story , with its moods , emotions and actions , is being told .
13 They must not be bought or sold or even taken or given as a present .
14 Most of them have been accidentally obtained from seeds so they must not be esteemed as different species , therefore I shall only insert their common names by which they are known in gardens , that those who are inclined to collect all the varieties may be at no loss for their titles .
15 They must not be forgotten for they gave their lives in defence of values which are under more bitter attack now all over the world than ever before . ’
16 Here the needing and the daring are situated in time as realities , and as such they must necessarily be conceived as occupying a before-position with respect to do and turn , as a need calling for action and an exercising of audacity leading to the achieving of a result .
17 Goody , however , claims that if the processes of political scepticism do occur at all in non-literate societies , they must always be limited and individual .
18 In addition they must always be muzzled and leashed when taken out in public and owners , who must have third party insurance , have to take adequate precautions to stop dogs escaping .
19 An inspection of the table reveals overlaps between the three trends , and clearly they should not be seen as mutually exclusive .
20 They should not be handled or taken away if found . ’
21 Above all , they should not be imposed and regulated by a central power .
22 Birkbeck 's study of garbage pickers in Cali , Colombia , suggests that they should not be viewed as vagrants left behind by economic development but as workers who are part of the industrial system ( Birkbeck 1979 ) .
23 These funerary items were nearly always painted by heraldic amateurs — signwriters , coachbuilders and so on — so although they provide useful clues they should not be regarded as authoritative , but of course the fact that they are not can also form part of the story the local historian has to tell .
24 As for polyunsaturated fats , these are a preferable substitute in our diet , but even they should not be regarded as totally beneficial .
25 They should not be regarded as simply a last resort , but involved in the consultation process surrounding possible action to prevent risk to employees .
26 Even if some of them come for what others hold to be a wrong reason , they should not be discouraged or their motives despised .
27 By this time in Durham one J. Bailey ( no relation ) had written that ‘ the expense of horses is now become so great , that they should not be used where it can be avoided .
28 They should not be discharged immediately they reach their target weights , but should become accustomed to eating normal meals rather than the high-energy diet necessary for weight gain .
29 However , they should not be over-used or applied anywhere near the face .
30 They should n't be informed and I think that 's wrong .
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