Example sentences of "[prep] be [verb] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | All monies collected with be shared equally by the St John Ambulance appeal and Medau . |
2 | Well , will , put it , put it into be washed tonight and then you can use it if you like . |
3 | In time ‘ yeoman ’ came to mean primarily a farmer who had raised himself out of the ruck of common husbandman , ‘ such as be exempted out of the rascalitie of the popular bee called and written yeomen , as in the degree next vnto gentlemen ’ ; and while careful to avoid making wealth appear the sole criterion , Smith adds that ‘ these tende their owne businesse , come not to meddle in publike matters and iudgements but when they are called and glad when they are deliuered thereof ’ . |
4 | OK , so I 've never seen Kurt look quite that pale before , and I 'm not sure it 's such a good idea for Courtney to be zipping about with Kurt on that hired motorbike while seven months pregnant but , hell , it 's not as if anyone 's dead . |
5 | The trucks themselves had to be manhandled down the steep rock-strewn defile and as the men were sweating away at this in the hot sun an Italian aircraft picked them up . |
6 | Unaffected adventurers can help their friends to leave the Tower , but affected characters will have to be manhandled out of the place . |
7 | Initally all the cargo had to be manhandled off . |
8 | The deer were not to be fenced out of enclosures in the forest with ‘ unreasonable hedges and ditches ’ , unless ‘ the greater part of the enclosure be sown with corn ’ . |
9 | ‘ I do n't think he is going to be stepping back from the front line , ’ he said . |
10 | Not Beethoven playing for everyday listening perhaps , but rather a fine wine , to be pondered over , and deliberated upon at length before its true quality most fully reveals itself . |
11 | The answer to this question needs to be couched as much in curriculum terms as in assessment terms . |
12 | Accepting that politically it would be unrealistic to expect the National Curriculum to be couched in other than conventional terms , ie subjects , I questioned the absence of a rationale . |
13 | For he was going to be burdened always with the conviction that it could have been avoided . |
14 | Another way of playing this game is to send children out into a local park with a list of items that are likely to be laying around naturally . |
15 | Obviously for the average electrician , stockbroker , or humanities-trained academic to be laying down the law un the value of a human blood substitute from cows or the spread of BSE would , as things stand , be foolish . |
16 | ‘ I must not be understood to be laying down a rule that in no case where a wife acts on her husband 's instructions and under his influence is it necessary to show that she has received independent advice . |
17 | Companies are likely to continue to be laying off surplus staff well into the recovery , as was the case during the last recession in the early '80s . |
18 | The petty officers said men of 72 nationalities were serving on the Red Crimea as ‘ one big happy family ’ and they did not want to be split up . |
19 | Interox to be split up |
20 | And that me and my old pal Norman Whiteside were on a collision course with him , that we needed to be split up . |
21 | He is strongly motivated by a desire for the collection never to be split up again . |
22 | Hurray-for-the-Medici cycle of paintings to be split up after 370 years |
23 | They overcame this problem by imagining a full turn , or one revolution , to be split up into 360 equal pieces . |
24 | It is not a great idea for us to be split up at this time . ’ |
25 | Either the government can order large firms to be split up into smaller independent companies , which it is hoped will act more competitively ( the so-called ‘ structural approach ’ ) , or the government can leave monopoly firms intact but seek to control their performance , for example by monitoring prices and profits and ordering price reductions when firms appear to be exerting their potential monopoly power . |
26 | Answer guide : This question needs to be split up into its constituent parts in order to take the student through the progression logically . |
27 | It 's bad enough having a seriously ill child without all having to be split up . |
28 | So she 's spending a third on stationery , she 's saving a third and the other third has got to be split up between |
29 | Although the records would withstand shear stresses , a simple knock on the edge could allow the two sides to be split apart . |
30 | He does n't understand the Tory Party is about to be split wide open . ’ |