Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] new [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They may relate new information to what has already been given in terms of causes ( so , consequently , because , for this reason ) or in time ( formerly , then , in the end , next ) or they may indicate a new departure or a summary ( by the way , well , to sum up , anyway ) .
2 GENERAL MOTORS of the US may build new facilities in the UK to support a major increase in Jaguar production as part of its plan to take a 30 per cent stake in the luxury car maker .
3 They may contrast new information with old information , or put another side to the argument ( or , on the other hand , however , conversely ) .
4 … if environmental problems are pursued rigorously enough and with sufficient attention to likely contributions from other disciplines they may foster constructive alterations in public policy but at the same time may stimulate new research and refinement of research methodology to the benefit of geographic discipline .
5 Reconstructions of events such as this , organised by local groups , encourage interest in local rest in local history and may yield new information .
6 C may lobby A , may reduce its own prices , may seek new markets elsewhere , or take other steps .
7 You may need new clothes and , perhaps , a briefcase ; the price of travel can make a hole in even the deepest pocket ; and depending on where your job is , you may need to pay advance rent on new accommodation .
8 And that may introduce new considerations not available to us today .
9 If he believes he should make new law democratically , in the spirit of the present legislature or the present climate of popular opinion , he might turn to past decisions as evidence of what the legislature or public is likely to think or want , for example .
10 The Great War is over and Bowling 's East End heroes must build new lives .
11 In conventional planning , this would mean that Sweden should build new power plants that burn coal or oil , to replace the nuclear power .
12 For most agriculture in developing countries , says Brandt , research should seek new methods of production that are less vulnerable to the high cost of energy .
13 And yet she must seek new outlets for her work ; she greatly wanted to expand her range of shoemaking outside the humdrum jobs of soling and heeling heavy working boots .
14 It must introduce new concepts , whether in mathematics , geography , physics or literature , concepts that are unfamiliar , and would have remained unknown to a child who had not been to school .
15 The membership is the lifeblood of a campaigning organisation like Amnesty , and we must explore new ways of making it as effective , and therefore as active , as possible .
16 So in general consumers should welcome new entrants to the credit market , not just because it widens their choice , but because it should tend to lower the cost of credit by sharpening competition .
17 I mean , a new year should bring new things but my silly wee sister is as silly as ever and Aunt Agatha is as grumpy .
18 Any language must accommodate new concepts .
19 The next book must break new ground , provide new insights , provide a new way of looking , or perhaps even a way of re-seeing the familiar .
20 Publishers should send new book , tape and CD packages to David Russell at The Bookseller ( ) , to arrive no later than Friday 21st May .
21 Perhaps research shows that the advertising should give new information , stimulate trial , change , ideas and perception or simply build awareness or greater familiarity with a name .
22 But , as 1992 approaches , and with the violence associated with the game so closely tied up with the image of England 's fans , it is the challenge of European integration which must provide new directions for the people 's game .
23 As well as providing a control on the extrapolation of geological boundaries , the cryptic compositional variations between the turbidite units should provide new insights into the different provenances that contributed material for the sedimentary infill .
24 The instrument should provide new clues about the structure of materials .
25 Well I , I take the implicit point that erm we 're all suffering cuts throughout the country , therefore why should n't higher education suffer similar cuts , but of course , higher education is in a different category to erm many other fields that the government pays for and sponsors , in that higher education is investment in the future , and therefore , if Britain is to survive erm as a , a nation of erm of some economic standing , is to well in the national , in the international stakes , then we must be innovative , we must create new things , and we must erm in , in that , to do that we must invest very strongly in higher education .
26 If we are to take account of the world in which our students now live — the world of mass media , information technology and global communications systems — and help them think critically about it , we must develop new teaching approaches , drawing together the theories , skills and research techniques of all academic disciplines .
27 Thirdly , they should develop new ideas about how existing desires and preferences are affected by influences such as persuasion and coercion .
28 Although we are now debating a piece of works legislation , it represents a major reform of parliamentary procedure , so I put down a marker at this stage to the effect that the Minister should be more forthcoming in considering whether we should have new procedures for dealing with orders .
29 I asked her how much writing she had lately done , and she laughed , and said she was learning so much , so very much , and when it was all learned she should have new matter to write about and many new things to say .
30 Why Professor John Kenneth Galbraith thinks you should read New Internationalist : " It 's a magazine with a purpose we can all applaud and must support "
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