Example sentences of "must [adv] [verb] [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The finiteness of the simplex method , established in Chapter 3 , shows that in any sequence of tableaux optimal over degenerate intervals , we must eventually reach a tableau with for all critical columns j , and consequently , at the next iteration , a tableau optimal over a non-degenerate interval .
2 The UKCC insists that any second level nurse seeking entry to a first level part of the register must successfully complete an examination of the same standard as that required for students undertaking a three year first level nursing preparation .
3 But before this is done the Home Secretary must expressly authorize the granting of the warrant which must be endorsed with a statement of that fact .
4 Any mailing list must obviously include the name of the TV or radio station or of the publication and the address .
5 There was nothing for her here ; and if this was admitted between them it must swiftly prove an admission with only one exit .
6 Second , when making an assessment , information about what a child is able to do in one situation must necessarily form the basis of inferences about what a child might be able to do in other situations .
7 Two wrongs do not make a right , of course , although they must necessarily shift the balance in how we might approach such an inalienable moral precept as the ‘ general belief that right and wrong are , after all , essentially distinct ’ .
8 This must necessarily include the replacement of the constraining and obsolete crown-subject relationship , which prevails in British law , by a modern state-citizenship relationship , the enactment of a bill of rights and the reform of the electoral system by means of proportional representation .
9 Jakobson 's answer to this argument is , however , a powerful one : all users of a language must necessarily know the system of categories into which its different elements are divided , even if only unconsciously ; and his analysis of poetry does not claim to represent what goes on in the reader 's mind , but to account for the special effect which the poetry , for reasons of which he may well be unaware , exercises on him .
10 To represent a happening as unforeseeable , however — and herein lies the explanation for the use of the infinitive with to — one must necessarily evoke a position before its occurrence : the stretch of time leading up to it must be evoked as containing no prior indication that it was going to occur .
11 We must constantly compare the copy with the reality shown to us by experienced paddlers and not simply look hard at a wide selection of paddlers and not simply look at our own friends and colleagues who may have been influenced by the same paddle strokes that we are studying ourselves .
12 We must hereafter keep the doing of this damnable magic from our shores . ’
13 Lenin was willing to make concessions , but not on the centralized unity of the party — ‘ we must not weaken the force of our offensive by breaking into numerous independent political parties ; we must not introduce estrangement and isolation and then have to heal an artificially implanted disease with the aid of these notorious ‘ federal ’ , plasters ’ .
14 Queen Margaret is most welcome to return but she must not bring an army of twenty thousand English ‘ advisers ’ with her .
15 The sole remaining restraint is the requirement that the advertising must not impair the solicitor 's independence and integrity and must not bring the profession into disrepute .
16 It follows that the conditions laid down for the registration of vessels must not form an obstacle to freedom of establishment within the meaning of articles 52 et seq .
17 The implementation of the information technology strategy must avoid this relationship 's being reversed : the coding scheme must not form the test of clinical systems .
18 Of course , we must not exaggerate the value of doubt and forget its darker side .
19 However , all this said and done , just as historians and archaeologists are today able to reconstruct the meaning of obsolescent forms of recording such as hieroglyphics or the structure and form of ancient buildings through the analysis of postholes , one must not underestimate the ability of future generations to decode the electronic records that are being created by today 's society .
20 Nevertheless , one must not underestimate the importance of earlier ideas about press freedom , nor must one underestimate the extent to which these ideas still reside within more complex statements about the mass media .
21 I must not give the impression of being without sin .
22 Many people ( in this authority ) are critical of the education system and of comprehensive schools , we must not give an opportunity for them to be critical .
23 It was an enormous subject upon which we had embarked , and I felt that , as a minor guest of the monastery , I must not monopolize the time of the guest whom everyone wanted to meet .
24 Mary Alston , arguing the case for a pay rise , pointed out in a speech as early as 1922 that It may be that prior to 1914 , women were employed in book composing only , but we must not forget the introduction of monotypes diverted hand labour to other channels correcting , making up and so forth , and in every large office today , not to speak of the small ones , we find women compositors setting , making up , doing author 's corrections and in some offices making ready for machine .
25 Such suspicions were certainly not entirely stilled when , at an early stage , Baker told staff that while they should not disparage the premier 's opponents , Central Office was , nonetheless , the office of the leader and therefore must not create the impression of neutrality .
26 You must not tell a citizen of Marseilles that Petronius , the author of the Satyricon , was not born near the Vieux-Port .
27 ‘ You must not disappoint the Doctor of his chase … ’
28 If you are fond of flowers and gardens , you must not miss a visit to the gardens of Quinta do Palheiro .
29 The Chancellor must not miss the opportunity in his November budget . ’
30 Rule 5 — 30(1) provides that a firm must not recommend a transaction to a private customer or act as a discretionary manager unless it has taken reasonable steps to enable the private customer to understand the nature of the risks involved .
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