Example sentences of "[noun pl] [modal v] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 But any solution that involves disconnecting activity from true values may in the long term take an even greater toll .
2 It seems logical to suppose that wilder and wilder swings must in the end get out of control .
3 The energetic pursuit of these two policies should in the long run ensure a substantial improvement in the employment situation .
4 We have decided to hand them over ( Gen Keightley is in touch and on good terms with the Russian general on his right ) , but I suggested that the Russians should at the same time give us any British prisoners or wounded who may be in his area .
5 With the present pace of things these survivors may in a generation 's time become a picturesque memory like the yeoman 's smock .
6 5.2.2 the Tenant 's Certificate has not been issued by the expiry of the period of immediately following the Possession Date then the provisions of clause 5.4 shall have effect immediately upon the expiry of the relevant period ( or upon the expiry of such extended period as the parties may within the relevant period agree in writing )
7 The effect on the level of savings may in the classical savings case be represented simply by T : .
8 I was not aware — I have not yet received reports — of that demonstration , but I believe that it is ironic that the IRA and its supporters should at the same time be enjoying the privileges of democracy and using the methods of terrorism .
9 Animals must on no account be used for experiments .
10 Perhaps , too , the archaic words might for a brief minute live again :
11 4 DURING THE CONTINUANCE of the Publishing Agreement , neither of the Authors shall without the consent in writing of the Publisher prepare or edit for any other publisher any work that is an expansion , abridgement or revision of the Work or of part of it ; or publish or cause to be published any work on the same subject which may reasonably be regarded as likely to conflict with the sale of the Work .
12 In the event of circumstances arising under 1 or 2 above which require the Insurers to notify the Society of the reduction or cancellation of cover the Insurers shall during the period from such reduction or cancellation until ten days after notification of the Society indemnify the Society against losses to the same extent as if cover had not been reduced or cancelled and if the Society shall within seven days of notification by the Insurers inform the Insurers that it wishes cover to continue on the same terms as if it had not been reduced or cancelled the Insurers shall indemnify the Society against losses on such terms for such period not exceeding six months as the Society shall specify and the Society shall be responsible for the payment of premium for such cover .
13 Here it was stressed that many streets and squares will in the future look very different from today , with each being treated individually , selecting an approach from a multitude of possibilities ( Figure 5.4 ) .
14 It marks , if implemented to any extent , a fundamental change in how primary schools will in the future be organised .
15 It was ‘ wholly appropriate ’ that information in these circumstances should in the first instance be given in the absence of the public .
16 Though it is mistaken to suppose that the British made no effort to leave the Masai better than they found them , it is clear that their potential emergence from the colonial period much as they had entered it was something their administrators could in the end accept with equanimity .
17 Re-definition on such lines could without a statute be effected by the House of Lords , which alone has sufficient authority to attempt the task , and would not involve much disturbance of decided cases ; there are certainly many obiter dicta at all levels to be sacrificed , but that would be a most desirable result .
18 As we debated the awards in Government , various colleagues told me that my arguments for reductions were ‘ egalitarian ’ and that the pay increase for judges would in no way influence the expectations of the nurses and the ancillary workers .
19 The prevalence of many countervailing centres of influence to government , in the form of local associations will in the long-term make it increasingly difficult for governments to concentrate all power in their hands .
20 The great , distinguished people of the world do not know that these beggars can in the pride of their souls , look down on them as the unfortunate ones , who are left on the shore for their worldly uses , but whose life ever misses the touch of the lover 's arms . ’
21 Those spurious Plants must from the Soil be torn ,
22 Yet at the same time local officers and shop stewards of the same unions were finding themselves party to local , enterprise-level agreements setting the terms under which temporary workers could for the first time be used , or under which their use could be expanded .
23 An FAO report published in November 1989 said that , despite a net increase in world cereal production , world stocks would for the third year running be " at or below the minimum necessary to safeguard global food security " , with wheat reserves in the leading exporting countries at their lowest since the world food crisis of the early 1970s .
24 My classes will for the time being be taken by other teachers , all of whom have said that they will look after them until I am ready to have them back .
25 These 10 places will in the main come from the middle 549 clubs who by their status do not qualify for the Cup .
26 Since citizens of all colours will for the first time be allowed to vote together , it will produce a legislature dominated by blacks .
27 On May 31 the EPLF vice-chairman Tamirat Laynie told relief officials at a meeting in Addis Ababa that priority would be given to relief operations : the port of Assab had been reopened by agreement with the EPLF and all relief agencies should within a week submit details of their future projects , he said .
28 In addition , the organized networks could to a certain extent rely on intimidation and social pressure .
29 Some of these mixtures contained as many as fifty or sixty different ingredients , and Hahnemann reasoned that the combined effects of so many different substances could in no way be known .
30 Obviously there are issues for which the pondering of moral principles will from the start play a much bigger part than the one which confronts the traveller .
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