Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] [be] [vb pp] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The policy would then need to be made uniform throughout the whole country . |
2 | Did everything need to be planned months ahead ? |
3 | Some of which are , well will need to be covered as we proceed er with the discussion on H two and I think in particular probably the additional paper produced by will need to be introduced Mr . |
4 | On arriving at Dingle , he had expected to be given charge of a spoilt , overdressed menina who would spend the whole voyage in her cot with her maidservant running about in attendance , so he had been pleasantly surprised to find in Sara an odd mixture of childish enthusiasm and womanly grace . |
5 | Director Freddie Shepherd , meanwhile , has denied reports that he plans to sell his 7pc shareholding to chairman Sir John Hall and is expected to be appointed vice-chairman . |
6 | Joshua Nkomo , leader of ZAPU , now dissolved and merged with the ruling party , was reappointed one of three Senior Ministers in the President 's Office and was expected to be made vice-president along with Simon Muzenda under forthcoming legislation providing for the creation of two vice-presidencies with equal rank . |
7 | The process is expected to be completed June 30 1994 . |
8 | Jiang is widely expected to be named China 's president in addition to his current post during the annual meeting of the National People 's Congress that begins on Monday . |
9 | The way that sons always are , they way they always expect to be taken care of . |
10 | Sadly , the Macintosh is still slightly more expensive than an equivalent PC system — especially when it has to be made PC compatible by adding AppleTalk or extras like the PC disk drive . |
11 | I 'm also very worried , and this has been mentioned erm , by Mr , that the er , the Home Secretary seems to regard the police constabulary as a mere crime busting organisation , whereas really , the preventative work , the crime prevention , the work in the schools and the community work is absolutely vital if we are ever to solve , erm , we 're ever to stop , the er , if we 're ever able to stop the rise in crime , and this really has to be done hand in hand , I feel with local councils , and I 'm glad to say that there are some initiatives around , one of them in Mr 's own district , which is making erm , some very important steps towards that . |
12 | Still , Lazaroni has to be given credit for absorbing the pan-Europeanism of his squad into something the Europeans will need to be aware of in Italy . |
13 | Therefore , argue Trist et al. , the work group has to be given responsibility for the entire cycle of operations , and for handling the interdependence between those on different shifts . |
14 | If this were so we would not find the genuine uneasiness about an influx of strangers ( or outside influences ) that can not in any realistic sense threaten the members of the group as individuals , for instance , the insistence by sections of the US citizens that English — of all languages — has to be given protection against immigrant languages by the grant of an official monopoly of public use . |
15 | He argued that Dorset should continue to record unmet need as it had been doing in a pilot project , although the decision is so politically sensitive that it has to be given clearance by the politicians at their June committee meeting . |
16 | ‘ The issue has to be tackled head on . |
17 | This problem has to be tackled head on ; without it any other tinkering with the legislation is just a waste of time . ’ |
18 | It has to be said poodles suffer from something of an image problem in some quarters . |
19 | Each of these students has to be taught neurology in a hospital department that has fewer than 100 beds . |
20 | Eventually , though , the program has to be tested in-circuit . |
21 | All that has to be taken care of in designing experiments to probe local reality . |
22 | The directive is simply another obstacle which has to be taken account of by broadcasting authorities when giving effect to their duty to preserve due impartiality . |
23 | ‘ by knowingly making a false report to … ’ ( specify person , not necessarily a constable ) This point has to be proved and in common with other offences where ‘ what a person knows ’ has to be proved difficulties can arise . |
24 | You want to be made love to . |
25 | Fragrant herbs play a great part in what has come to be called aromatherapy , in which essential fragrant oils from herbs are rubbed on to the skin . |
26 | In her essay ‘ Sculpture in the Expanded Field ’ , 5 art historian Rosalind Krauss explored ideas about categories in ways that might be useful to this discussion about textiles : ‘ over the last 10 years rather surprising things have come to be called sculpture : narrow corridors with TV monitors at the ends , large photographs documenting country hikes … categories like sculpture and painting have been kneaded and stretched and twisted in an extraordinary demonstration of elasticity , and display of the way in which a cultural term can be extended to include just about anything ’ . |
27 | At any rate , this line of thought was explored in the eighteenth century , notably by David Hume in A Treatise of Human Nature ( first published in 1739 ) and has come to be termed empiricism . |
28 | Also known as Minch Men or Blue Men of the Minch , these are evil-natured , blue-skinned mermen ( see MERMAID ) , often considered to be fallen angels . |
29 | He was reported to be paid £2,000 per day for his efforts — as much as some objecting organizations were likely to spend in total . |
30 | Fashion : GREEN — AND FIT TO BE SEEN Jane Mulvagh on how a family crisis prompted Europe 's largest clothing manufacturer to plan an environment-friendly label |