Example sentences of "and [adv] [pron] [vb mod] be [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 Gently and skilfully he must be challenged to think back and think deeply .
2 And eventually they could be replaced by American products .
3 Gradually , you will build up your distance , get your breathing right and eventually you 'll be hooked .
4 It was pointless him going right through the centre because he was incurring far too much damage and eventually he would be shot down .
5 Sometimes it is convenient to give the line some thickness and so what may be called the " cooked spaghetti " model is used .
6 She is going to go on behaving beautifully and so I shall be forced to behave like a pig to establish the difference between us .
7 The official receiver as convener of the meeting can require the bankrupt to attend the meeting ( r 6.84 ) and so it must be presumed that matters regarding the bankrupt 's activities can be raised by either the official receiver or those present .
8 It picks up all low-pitched noise , and so it should be used in quiet circumstances , on your own .
9 A squadron commander would suggest to me that " old so-and-so is getting a bit teased-out and perhaps he should be rested " , or " it might be convenient if he did not return after his next leave " — these leaves were quite frequent , something like six or seven days every six or seven weeks .
10 Adultery has been a hanging matter — both in this and in the usual sense of the phrase — for the literature of the past , and perhaps it could be suggested that both senses may at times be presented to the mind by what Amis does with the subject , and that there is no striking difference in this respect between what he did in the Sixties and what he has done in the Eighties .
11 The Bible is treated primarily as a human product ; the world is explored by human investigation , and only what can be established rationally and scientifically is to be believed ; religion itself must be validated by reference to human experience , human values and human reason .
12 None of these elements is specified , and only one can be identified with any confidence .
13 None of these elements is specified , and only one can be identified with any confidence .
14 Thumb Sucking — If this is done frequently and perniciously it must be taken in hand and treated as a bad habit .
15 To put it another way , he was aware of the idea of divided consciousness , much discussed in his day , and here and elsewhere he can be seen applying it to his own actions .
16 The effect of grouped updates is to cause parts of the file to require few , if any , updates so records are being skipped , and other areas in which all — or most — records are updated , and thus there will be lost revolutions because processing times exceed inter-record gap times .
17 A master disk can be read into memory and once there can be written out to blank disks many times .
18 He certainly has not become an angel overnight , but his more extreme behaviour has been left behind and usually he can be relied upon to be helpful and co-operative .
19 Mr. Beazley also relied on the general statements of principle in paragraphs 9 and 10 of the Peters case [ 1983 ] E.C.R. 987 quoted above , which he submitted echoed the general principles laid down in the Gubisch case [ 1987 ] E.C.R. 4861 ; these are important principles , to which full weight must be given , but they can not in my judgment warrant the court placing a construction on the words of article 5(1) which they can not reasonably bear , and moreover they must be balanced against another general principle , laid down for example in Kalfelis v. Bankhaus Schrôder , Mûnchmeyer , Hengst and Co .
20 The sooner the Secretary of State and the Prime Minister come to the Principality , the better : let the voters there decide who should have the credit for what is happening in Wales and also what should be done to the Conservative party in view of the deplorable levels of unemployment to be found in Wales .
21 Leaving aside several other good attempts to explain the difference between causes and causal circumstances and their effects , and also what can be said of great obstacles in the way of these attempts ( Mackie , 1974 , Ch. 7 , 1979 ; Ayer , 1984a ; Sanford , 1976 , 1985 ; Papineau , 1985b ; Honderich , 1986 ) , let us return to and concentrate on our ordinary convictions about the difference .
22 Unfair advantage of Mrs. Stuart 's confidence in her husband was taken by Mr. Stuart , and also it must be added by Mr. Bruce .
23 The assumptions on which Modigliani and Miller base their model are very important and hence they must be described before proceeding to a formal development .
24 The Escort estate is guaranteed a following , and overall it will be deserved .
25 And maybe they would be cowed not only by the discipline but by the man who wielded it .
26 This may be also a question which you will say the districts are in a better position to answer and maybe they should be forewarned that if you say that , they will be asked that question .
27 If she did n't manage they 'd take the baby away , and then everything would be wasted .
28 There may be some kind of notice on them that says , you know , these machines should not be switched and then everything would be switched off .
29 ‘ The teachers do n't teach , the priests do n't bother , and they 're releasing all the lunatics into the community so they do n't get looked after and they 'll either pass out from exposure or starvation or kill people because they 're mad , and then they 'll be slung into prison to add to the overcrowding , and all in all it does n't make a lot of sense .
30 And then they 'll be reproduced ?
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