Example sentences of "[noun prp] [adv] [vb base] to be " in BNC.

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1 By the way , I know things have been a bit strained at Elland Road in recent weeks , but did the last record to be played before the team came out on saturday REALLY have to be Bruce Springsteen singing ‘ Glory days — well , they pass you by … ’
2 England scarcely deserve to be there either , though they may well mooch their way through the side entrance .
3 Blackburn now look to be the only only team capable of catching scum .
4 Given the dire state of the rouble , computer sales in Russia now tend to be mostly to those pockets of the economy still generating hard currency .
5 In Norway and Denmark there continue to be high levels of popular support for state-provided welfare but there has been a marked and sustained shift against state control and intervention in the economy .
6 I think my first issue was about September 1970 and do I recall a two-page debate along the lines of ‘ Does Bob Dylan Really Want To Be Elvis Presley ? ’
7 If a business only exceeds the threshold for arrivals of goods and not despatches , then SSDs are only completed for arrivals ; similarly , if the threshold is only breached for goods despatched , then SSDs only need to be completed for despatches .
8 The finer details of the proposals from Environment Secretary Michael Heseltine still have to be ironed out .
9 This is most obvious in the case of social class-based cultures , but the more recent resurgence of Scottish and Welsh nationalism and the ‘ troubles ’ in Northern Ireland have underlined that the dynamics of regional and ‘ sub-national ’ cultures in Britain also need to be understood in the context of material inequalities and patterns of cultural domination , subordination and conflict .
10 Thus industries in Britain today tend to be clustered together .
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