Example sentences of "[vb mod] be [adv] in the " in BNC.
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1 | Try to understand that Pop should be up in the air , supernatural , alive to all angles and shades of emotion , plastic and twice-cooked . |
2 | They 're now even on to the vile Trade Union Reform Bill , they 're accepting it admittedly but but they 're accepting it , but it 's in the wrong Bill it 's in the wrong place it should be up in the front . |
3 | Steve Nicol should be back in the defence today , but Dalglish must also be concerned about his strikers . |
4 | His hand , the same one he injured in April last year , needs at least two weeks ' rest , but he should be back in the ring in February . |
5 | His hand , the same one he injured in April last year , needs at least two weeks ' rest , but he should be back in the ring in February . |
6 | ‘ It 's a terrible shame that , after all these years of feminism , women should be back in the place where they are regarded as expendable . |
7 | Talking about Strachan , O'Leary also said that he should be back in the 1st team in a couple of weeks . |
8 | Recognising that the point will vary from one member of the profession to another , there are perhaps four questions which should be constantly in the worker 's mind : |
9 | But we 're working on it , so it should be out in the not too distant future . ’ |
10 | Product should be out in the third quarter on Sun Microsystems Inc , Data General Corp and Hewlett-Packard Co workstations . |
11 | An R4000SC multiprocessor is also under development , and should be out in the third quarter . |
12 | I believe they should be out in the like the National Press and things like that |
13 | Why it should be so in the case of the United Kingdom constitution is , again , a matter of history — and perhaps it again behoves us to bear in mind that the constitution is a process , rather than a settled state of things . |
14 | He must be somewhere in the district . ’ |
15 | I suppose it must be somewhere in the flat … ’ |
16 | He had no idea where he was , except that it must be somewhere in the wilds of Wales , well hidden from any possibility of rescue ; and he took his first unwilling look about him in the conviction that captivity could mean nothing better than solitude , close confinement and squalor . |
17 | I ca n't think where well it must be somewhere in the office . |
18 | He might be downstairs in the plush lounge , or in his own room talking to Lee . |
19 | Because that might be right in the middle of an assignment and they |
20 | That might be so in the case of other illness or disaster but in addictive disease total commitment regardless of cost to self actually works against recovery . |
21 | ‘ I believe we 're the only ones left , ’ said Jed as they stopped at East Acton , a rather dark little station that looked as if it might be out in the country . |
22 | And one suspects it might be back in the days of the nineteen fifties , nineteen sixties when the labour party opposed anything at local level , of course , but at local level that might tend towards helping people to be upwardly mobile on the grounds that upwardly mobile people stop voting labour . |
23 | I 'll be up in the shed . |
24 | ‘ I 'll be around in the summer to show you the ropes , depend upon it . |
25 | G. warns them he 'll be round in the morning , to ensure , he says , that they keep making the effort to do a good cleaning job . |
26 | Erm so it 'll be upstairs in the Green |
27 | And we need to find him because he 'll be right in the middle of whatever 's going on . |
28 | ‘ I 'll be here in the morning to walk to school . |
29 | ‘ I 'll be here in the morning , OK ? ’ |
30 | ‘ Giovanna 'll be here in the morning , ’ Molly said with determined brightness . |