Example sentences of "[adv] [be] [adv] [adj] to find " in BNC.

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1 Judging by his expression , Clive had not been best pleased to find me ensconced in the Parsons ' sitting room that night .
2 First , interferon gene deletions have previously been associated with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and it would , therefore , not be too surprising to find that abnormalities of interferon regulation or of the interferon signalling pathway were tumorigenic .
3 Inter-City , the next candidate for privatisation , makes money , so it should not be too hard to find a buyer .
4 Fratter 's ( 1989 ) study indicates that provided practitioners are convinced about the importance of contact , adoptive families may not be too difficult to find .
5 It should not be too difficult to find the body .
6 And er it was probably where the drovers came through , it 's a drove road and I , I have n't been quite able to find out what he di I think he would be a shepherd probably .
7 It 's better that you should n't be too easy to find . ’
8 The morning had flown , and if Luke was back he would n't be too pleased to find her still missing .
9 The sticks would n't be too difficult to find , not here in the wood , especially after the gale .
10 Should n't be too difficult to find one , I should imagine .
11 ‘ It should n't be too difficult to find .
12 Would n't be very hard to find them on the streets would it ?
13 ‘ It still should n't be that difficult to find out if the place has been tampered with , ’ Charlotte said .
14 Geoffrey 's rooms could n't be that difficult to find .
15 The reason for this in turn is quite straightforward : in any language which makes a distinction between nouns and adjectives , it will be natural to use an adjective when assignment of a property is required ; it may sometimes be quite easy to find an adjective and a noun which express near enough — or even exactly — the same properties , and differ only in that one is an adjective and the other is a noun , but to use the latter for assignment is to risk conveying the unwanted imputation of " entity-hood " on top of the semantic value required ( see Section 1.10 ) ; therefore when a noun or noun phrase is chosen it will normally presuppose that the construction is not that of assignment of a property but instead one of equation .
16 Physical format can affect use — small print , for instance , or the fact that oversized books and pamphlets are located separately and therefore are more difficult to find .
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