Example sentences of "[vb pp] to be done " in BNC.

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1 Inspection and monitoring are expected to be done by mobile robots capable of pattern recognition .
2 ‘ ( a ) the manner in which , and purposes for which , the product has been marketed , its get-up , the use of any mark in relation to the product and any instructions for , or warnings with respect to , doing or refraining from doing anything with or in relation to the product ; ( b ) what might reasonably be expected to be done with or in relation to the product ; and ( c ) the time when the product was supplied by its producer to another ; and nothing in this section shall require a defect to be inferred from the fact alone that the safety of a product which is supplied after that time is greater than the safety of the product in question . ’
3 ( b ) what might reasonably be expected to be done with or in relation to the product ; and
4 What might reasonably be expected to be done with the product ?
5 Use Section 3(2) ( b ) provides that a court should take into account , " what might reasonably be expected to be done with or in relation to the product …
6 The pumping was said to be done by Germans , faultlessly disguised as British officers , or even , it had been whispered , by genuine British officers who had fallen for German propaganda .
7 As Hopwood states ( 1982 , p. 43 ) : ‘ Familiarity with experience elsewhere should instil a greater realization of the differences between what should be done and what is said to be done , and what is done and what might be done . ’
8 Everyone agrees that something will have to be seen to be done before the next annual general meeting in February .
9 Mr Andrew Cammish , representing Shaun Williams , had told them : ‘ Justice must be seen to be done as well as be done and it is my duty to bring any particular irregularity to the court 's attention .
10 Payton had been hauled down by Penney , so justice was seen to be done when he hit Mohan 's free-kick past Veysey .
11 Steve Platt finds that the people who sold their votes are not necessarily Labour supporters ; Missing millions Did vanishing voters tip the electoral scales , asks Jolyon Jenkins ; Culture of contentment The western world seems set on a course that will lead to great violence in our cities , says J K Galbraith ; On the clothes line The Paris fashion industry employs illegal immigrants at knock-down wages , reports Nyta Mann ; Symbolic injustice The importance of the Rodney King case is that injustice was done , and was seen to be done , says Alexander Cockburn
12 Symbolic injustice The importance of the Rodney King case , says Alexander Cockburn , is that injustice was done , and seen to be done .
13 Injustice was not only done , but seen to be done and this is something all thoughtful citizens should applaud .
14 Soon a video of this execution may well be available and people will be able to pop it into their video machines every time they feel the need to have ‘ justice seen to be done ’ .
15 Justice was neither being done nor being seen to be done .
16 A Scottish Office spokesman said : ‘ Justice must not only be seen to be done — but heard to be done . ’
17 The duty solicitor scheme was projected as a public service by the Law Society : ‘ The prime object of a duty solicitor scheme is to provide unrepresented defendants with any legal assistance they may require and , in the context of the adversary system , to help ensure that justice is done and seen to be done . ’
18 Explanations of this kind have a certain political attractiveness — by making training , selection and deployment the target of reform , things can be done , they can be seen to be done , and they can be done relatively cheaply too .
19 No longer would their errors be held to ridicule in respect of run-outs , stumpings and certain other contentious issues ( but not lbws or bat-pad catches — though there could be a case for relieving the umpires of the task of no-balling ) ; nor could players justifiably feel disgruntled for the superior eye of the camera would be deciding their fates with pronounced accuracy , ensuring that justice was done and seen to be done .
20 Then a complete rehearing before a differently constituted body would be needed in order for justice to be seen to be done .
21 Justice must be seen to be done , however , and when it had been seen to be done , the miscreants were cheered by a crowd assembled outside the court .
22 Justice must be seen to be done , however , and when it had been seen to be done , the miscreants were cheered by a crowd assembled outside the court .
23 Secrecy can be damaging in that : ( a ) the sources of power and influence are obscured ; ( b ) public servants are not properly accountable ; ( c ) public participation is seriously hampered ; ( d ) justice is not often seen to be done ; ( e ) inefficiency and error are made more likely .
24 In Sussex Justices the court said that " it is of fundamental importance that justice should not only be done but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done . "
25 This seems to me to be more consistent with the need for justice to be seen to be done — and this both by the alleged contemnor and the more general public .
26 Thus where the body is judicial in nature the lower test of reasonable suspicion should suffice , reflecting the importance of the idea that justice should be seen to be done .
27 I 'm stuck in a cell with a reeking bucket , and two hundred years to wait before justice can be done , and be seen to be done .
28 ‘ Romany law is as ancient as yours — and our justice is seen to be done . ’
29 Does my right hon. Friend agree that , if justice is to be seen to be done , it is far better for it to be dispensed closer to the community in which the crime took place ?
30 My hon. Friend is entirely right : it is the principle that matters , and the ultimate principle is that there should be justice and that justice should be seen to be done .
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