Example sentences of "[vb mod] not be [adj] to " in BNC.

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1 Things on the menu must not be available to the child at times other than when he or she is being rewarded .
2 The disorder arises as a result of brain damage , particularly of the left parietal lobe , and for the label apraxia to be applicable , the patient 's difficulties must not be due to problems in comprehending the examiner 's instructions .
3 This provides that the option scheme shares must not be subject to restrictions other than restrictions attaching to all shares of the same class .
4 It must be reasonable , and it must not be repugnant to the general law of the country .
5 ‘ Easy-going parents must not be afraid to be firm , ’ he was suggesting , ‘ Moderate strictness is not harmful . ’
6 The way confrontation is handled should not be destructive to the counsellee .
7 There was , therefore , great concern that PCBs should not be subject to inadequate heat treatment .
8 The following should not be subject to commision by the manager :
9 The committee also said that solicitors who appear in court should not be subject to the same restrictions as barristers , such as the ‘ cab-rank rule ’ requiring barristers to accept cases on a ‘ first come first served ’ basis .
10 The Commission had taken much of its case from the evidence of the BBFC , differing only in proposing that the private exhibition of films on domestic occasions should not be subject to criminal sanction provided that no person under 16 was present and no charge was made for the exhibition or for anything provided in connection with it .
11 More importantly , it reiterates the belief that ‘ [ t ] he organisation and content of media should not be subject to centralised political or state bureaucratic control ’ .
12 It was agreed , for example , that the post-devaluation cuts and the later cuts in rural electrification should not be subject to public announcement .
13 The suppression of vice is therefore , Lord Devlin argues , just as important as the suppression of subversive activities , and just as it is impossible to point to an area of morality which should not be subject to the law , so there is no area of morality which can be described as ‘ private ’ .
14 To the extent that non-governmental bodies perform functions which government would have to perform if they did not , there is no good reason why such bodies should not be subject to judicial review in the same way as a government body performing equivalent functions would be .
15 The question was whether there was any reason , based on the nature of the power or the circumstances of its exercise , why it should not be subject to review for reasonableness and fairness ; in other words , was the decision or action ‘ justiciable ’ ?
16 All works of art have the inalienable right to live an honorable life and should not be subject to inappropriate interference .
17 the size of herds or flocks should not be detrimental to the animals , behaviour patterns , ie. they should not be lonely or under severe stress
18 Most of them are produced by women , who provide insights that come from relating female experience to a body of writing ; logically , there is no reason why these insights should not be available to male critics with the right sympathies and sensibility , but in practice most of this criticism is by women .
19 ‘ It seems undesirable that information of this kind should not be available to ordinary readers of the accounts . ’
20 Trees such as poplars , elms , limes and oaks account for much shrinkage in soil and should not be closer to the building than 1.5 times their own height .
21 This is because it is of the very nature of the protocol that acts adopted under it should not be applicable to the United Kingdom .
22 There is no reason why a contractual body performing public functions should not be amenable to these remedies .
23 But Willis ends his account with a note of despair when he writes that the life of the shop floor worker should not be romanticised and that others should not be blind to its nature :
24 Well we would all welcome that but in in its absence , I suggest that the current policy is defined by the R P G , even though that 's not specifically targeted at North Yorkshire , none the less , to be consistent , North Yorkshire should not be entitled to a to reduce arbitrarily , it 's er migration assumptions .
25 Highly-perfumed products such as soap should not be next to foodstuffs which may become contaminated .
26 There seems to be no reason why this approach should not be transferable to humans for the treatment of the pulmonary features of CF.
27 The general muddle was discussed in Chapter 6.2(c) above : in principle , a person whose conduct was caused by mental disorder should not be liable to criminal conviction , but in practice the narrow and antiquated defence of insanity is rarely invoked in England ( a handful of cases each year ) , and the courts normally proceed to conviction and then select a medical disposal where appropriate .
28 I for my part can not see why , subject to compliance with the proviso , a person should not be liable to be extradited under the terms of the Treaty if he was party to a crime committed in Sweden , such as , for example , the importation of drugs into Sweden , even if he was not himself in Sweden at the time of the importation .
29 It was therefore desirable in the public interest that statements made to the appropriate authority investigating a complaint against a police officer should not be liable to be produced or disclosed or referred to in any proceedings save disciplinary or criminal proceedings officially brought against the police officer in question .
30 The argument that cheaper labour costs force manufacture abroad should not be acceptable to us as prospective purchasers .
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