Example sentences of "[noun] to be in [det] " in BNC.

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1 For Kelsen , the dynamic principle is characteristic of legal positivism which understands law to be in some sense a product of human acts and decisions rather than a deduction from timeless and immutable principles .
2 It was always my dream to be in that situation .
3 We had made our break under the trees — the worst place to be in that dreadful weather — so I urged my group on .
4 The Statements of Attainment need to be in some ways " unpacked " in relation to the chosen programme of study and reordered not in sequence of difficulty but in terms of their place in the programme to ensure that opportunities for assessment are capitalised upon .
5 All them things in there that 's no business to be in that carrier .
6 Well , I , I , if I can anticipate , it 's quite possible for Arthur to be in another two groups , to er , notify us who their representative is in due course
7 I do n't believe that I am really going to have the chance to be in this movie .
8 What was your role to be in this operation ?
9 There is , however , some evidence of Eisenhower 's own dismay when he found Anglo-American relations to be in such disarray in 1953 .
10 Extract from a letter received from a disabled resident at Sussexdown ‘ It really is a privilege to be in such a lovely place , and to be so well cared for , there ca n't , I 'm sure , be another Home like it in the whole of Britain . ’
11 Yeah , really it 's a frustrating end of it , but working for Time gives me the opportunity to be in these countries and to do a good photoreportage on the country , even though it 's very rarely published .
12 He had reason to be in that camp …
13 It 's not so much their habit of closing their wings just as you draw close enough to see ; it 's more their unwillingness to be in any way uniform .
14 A good length of time to be in this position is about twenty minutes .
15 Their minds have never been sufficiently clear of the substance or process of addiction to be in any significant degree of recovery .
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