Example sentences of "[that] be [verb] in this " in BNC.

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1 It is these methods and techniques that are explained in this book .
2 This set me thinking on the themes that are expressed in this book .
3 The engineering approach not only includes the road system designs that are debated in this book , but also incorporates attempts to modify the vehicles .
4 It is these features that are explored in this chapter .
5 Labour Members may jeer in a debate in the House , but do they believe that they will get through an election campaign with the inconsistencies that are revealed in this document ?
6 However , it is not only the ‘ moral ’ as opposed to ‘ natural ’ qualities that are treated in this way .
7 On the level of er drugs and alcohol though we 're concerned to provide more social work time and support for the voluntary er agencies that are working in this field and also to provide direct services to people who are using drugs .
8 I guess not many that are sat in this room .
9 This work started originally in , in erm Nottingham University and in Aberdeen University and erm now we 're rather lucky in that I think we have erm one company , Oxford Instruments , that supply almost all the big magnets that are used in this work all over the world .
10 Erm if you have a look through them and then have a quick write down of what gifts you think the different ones that are mentioned in this are using .
11 I think it 's been established that thirty-eight per cent of the people who now serve on police authorities have business e e experience a an and I I really like my Lor Noble Lord , Lord , er do n't really appreciate the need for the changes that are suggested in this bill .
12 The paper praised Biograph for ‘ having opened up a new vein for motion picture subjects ’ , argued that ‘ no orator , no editorial writer , no essayist could so strongly and effectively present the thoughts that are conveyed in this picture ’ , and concluded that it was ‘ another demonstration of the force and power of motion pictures as a means of conveying ideas ’ .
13 Five of the seven ethnic groups that were relocated in this way were rehabilitated and partially repatriated to their native territories in 1956–7 .
14 So in relation to section 13(1) of the Acts of 1974 and 1976 , for a judge ( who is always dealing with an individual case ) to pose himself the question : ‘ Can Parliament really have intended that the acts that were done in this particular case should have the benefit of the immunity ? ’ is to risk straying beyond his constitutional role as interpreter of the enacted law and assuming a power to decide at his own discretion whether or not to apply the general law to a particular case .
15 Figure 7.5 shows the differences in P(A) for the films that were used in this study , a comparison of this figure with Figure 7.1 suggests that although the total amount of information in a stimulus does play an important role in memory it is clearly not sufficient to explain the recognition results .
16 It 's once again my very pleasant task to welcome you to this , which is the thirty eighth in the series of great centenary lectures , that were inaugurated in this hall in nineteen seventy on a very noteworthy and somewhat stormy occasion .
17 It is this more general class of solutions that is considered in this section .
18 In Couperin 's Magnificat for two voices , it is ‘ Et misericordia ’ that is set in this notation , and a slow tempo would be well in accord with the usual Baroque Affekt for this passage .
19 So I 'm not a for a moment suggesting that some rules and regulations are n't needed and I think that er the trouble is that every rule and regulation that is passed in this house , there 's always an excuse for it and there 's usually a very good reason for it , but that is the problem that the government faces and it 's quite fairly er a problem the treasury face when they introduce these statutory instruments because er no one can disagree that fraud must be stamped out , all I 'm actually saying is that unfortunately upstairs we have a deregulation bill going ahead at all pace with hundreds of clauses and hundreds of new rules to try and red hundreds of new clauses to reduce the number of rules and here we are downstairs on the floor we have passing for very good reason perhaps , more rules and regulations and there are four more tonight and I believe that every government department Madam deputy speaker , has a minister specially appointed to keep an eye on deregulation and I just wondered although er my honourable friend on the front bench mentioned that er the even the D T I minister responsible for deregulation has looked at these , I wonder if there is a minister in the treasury , they 've actually put a minister in the treasury responsible for deregulation or is the ministry actually above deregulation because I think that er I got the impression that the that every ministry would have a deregulation minister and I think it would be rather useful to know who the deregulation minister is in the treasury .
20 Whether the increasing in capitation that the Health Authority perceive could actually be used er , to , to meet the shortfall that is identified in this paper .
21 By simply following the day by day eating , exercise and positive thinking programme that is detailed in this book .
22 These approaches — startling both to old guard materialists and to some conservative believers — deserve the popularisation that is offered in this book with the accreditation of a working scientist .
23 The , the problem that is arising in this , is that it is now clear that , er , that the Grants Panel are running out of money this year , because of the take up of , of lots more grants .
24 The reflex increase in urine flow that is produced in this circumstance severely tested the resources of the space-suits worn by the early astronauts ! )
25 So the enquiry that is reported in this paper is into what is ‘ in the mind ’ in terms of mental processes and constructs and how what is ‘ in the mind ’ makes particular political milieux .
26 That man 's recorded everything that was said in this room .
27 ‘ It 's time that was forgotten in this house , ’ he said brusquely .
28 This is the one that was used in this article to illustrate the knitting of a rectangle and it is shown here in the form that it appears in many publications .
29 Partly because this is one void pressure flow study , and so we have evolved from here to take on the sort of technology that was pioneered in this country by David , using a simple ambulatory erm study , and we 've added to this erm er a hard wire connection from a flowmeter .
30 Well I suppose a very junior clerk , the first job I was given was , well it 's unheard of in this day and age but what they had was what they call a bundi clock and there every driver and conductor had got a key that was inserted in this clock and on it was his personal number , well when he reported for duty , he inserted this key into the clock , turned the handle and stamped on to a piece of paper , a roll of paper , his number and the time he reported and the next day it was my job to go through and record from this piece of paper how many minutes they were late f reporting for duty and if they erm were more than , I think about three or four minutes we had to send them a memo telling them , that 's how things were in those days that people were , they toed the line or else .
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