Example sentences of "that [pron] [vb mod] be [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 I learned later that , in the presence of a superior officer , he had wrongly suggested that I might be returned to the hotel after treatment .
2 I had set my sights on getting a good position in training so that I would be sent to the 2ème Régiment Étranger de Parachutistes .
3 So maybe we would have been great to have the skills before I did it , and that 's why I am on the course this Erm , the only thing that I can think of that 's erm , something that I do believe and I am committed to getting changed , is er , a system in our offices , in one of our departments , but I do have erm , authority over the people that I would be talking to , so , I know at the end of the day , I could just say , do it , but I 'm trying to get them to believe in changing erm , and just sort of certain benefits of it .
4 Knowing that I would be returning to work when ( my second baby ) was three months old , I acquired a battery-operated breast pump , as this time I was determined to express at lunch time to keep my supply going .
5 No , it will not be the gas board in the Republic of Ireland , and I suspect that I shall be returning to the subject of gas all afternoon and most of the evening .
6 I kept going to the toilet , positive that I must be bleeding to death .
7 It 's the same common fear that I will fall apart , physically and emotionally , that I will be reduced to a pile of tattered pulp , that I will never be loved by anyone , that I will fail , like … like — ’
8 On the way we stopped in many towns and villages , so that I could be shown to people .
9 I had said that we should go to Egypt for this , not believing that the occasion would ever really arise ; that I should be married to Syl and taken to the country in which I had come to life and lost it .
10 He looked around , as if afraid that someone might be listening to their conversation .
11 She smiled dazzlingly at the little reporter and hoped that she would be referred to as ‘ charming ’ .
12 She had arranged to meet Luke in the bar for a drink , and she hoped that he had a dinner engagement so that she would be left to her own devices afterwards .
13 ‘ She felt pressurised that she would be expected to be as career-orientated as she was before having the baby , ’ says Sandra , ‘ so she works with us because we are relaxed about it — if she does n't want to work on Wednesday , that 's fine , she can work on Friday instead .
14 His next letter offered her marriage to save her from the dreadful future of stripping off that she would be subjected to otherwise .
15 She liked the taste of his mouth , the feel of his tongue caressing hers , but she did not feel threatened by the thought that she might be expected to ‘ go all the way ’ like some poor teenager on a heavy date .
16 If she does not feel confident that she will be listened to and her views taken into account , she will not express her reservations and probably not administer the antibiotics .
17 There 'd be so many other people around that she 'd be cushioned to some degree from the effect of his presence , she had reasoned .
18 Shortly afterwards Miss T. went into labour and at 10.45 p.m. a decision was reached that she should be transferred to the maternity unit .
19 In the previous month Henry and Philip had held another conference at Gisors , confirming the settlement reached in December 1183 , but this time , instead of promising that Alice would marry one of his sons , Henry agreed that she should be married to Richard .
20 Where a woman fails to perform her expected role properly the GP tends to see her ‘ either in terms of the conventional models of their own social background ( she must adjust to her situation ) , or in terms of individual personal inadequacy ( that she must be referred to the psychiatrist ) ’ ( Barrett and Roberts , 1978 , p. 46 ) .
21 If you wish to obtain cover please send £5.00 to the office so that you may be added to the list .
22 What can we get out of it and we 'll do that tomorrow , we 'll derive y'know estimates of expectations , co-efficients and and elasticities and it 's those sorts of things that you might be asked to in an exam but , you wo n't need to derive anything in your exams
23 ‘ Katherine , I haven t yet told you how pleased we all are that you shall be going to school here and be with us at Valois frequently .
24 There were still — at the end of the enlightened eighteenth century , that Age of Reason which matched itself against Athens — old women in Lamplugh who were convinced that you could be led to your death by a will-o'-the-wisp or terrified out of life by the fairies .
25 you can write down these words , that would then be given you a clue things that you could be saying to your customers , where , right , if you start thinking about the job that you 're doing and I give you the word where , right you think of the number of times you can use the word where , with a customer , right
26 I understand that you will be faxing to me today a request for banker 's details and credit references .
27 How can you guarantee that you will be restored to your proper un-self ?
28 Becoming an actuary does not mean that you will be chained to a desk in the U.K. About 750 members of the Institute of Actuaries are employed overseas by U.K. and other employers .
29 During Stage II you may well find that you will need to give up one or both of your snacks each day in order to make way for the higher calorie foods that you will be adding to your diet .
30 Consequently , it is through consideration of these issues that one might be attracted to what , in any economically liberal conception of possible organizational postmodernism , would hardly be a promising example .
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