Example sentences of "[be] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They 'd be on to central heating systems next .
2 Now the hunt must be on for tryp-killing drug molecules which will actually penetrate into the choroid epithelium .
3 There were problems with the warrant , and the Legal Attaché was going to be down at New Scotland Yard for the morning , and probably for the afternoon .
4 Everyone will be down for early breakfast .
5 Much of that must be down to erstwhile Spector/Young arranger Jack Nitsche .
6 In two years it could well be down to single figures .
7 On the M forty between junctions four and five for High Wycombe and Stokenchurch , there are two narrow lanes in both directions , with a contraflow system for a short stretch about mid-way between the two junctions , also that can be down to single line traffic at times , so it is likely to slow you down a little .
8 And therefore in a sense , it might be down to departmental management that it was n't something that the suggestion system should encompass .
9 The worst may soon be over for Australian wool farmers .
10 It will be up to ordinary people as ‘ shareholders ’ in the system to winkle out these deserving cases who would otherwise pass unnoticed .
11 ‘ It 's when questions of loyalty will be up to individual captains of ships that confusion and misunderstandings could happen , ’ said one .
12 If my right hon. Friend succeeds in gaining enough support for his efforts , the European Community will set up a framework of support and it will be up to individual countries to decide , within that framework , how they wish to use the funds .
13 ‘ If Mr Smith makes a similar motion to our council , it will be up to individual members to decide how to vote . ’
14 For second home owners , it will be up to local authorities to use their discretion in setting a lower rate of charge for certain properties .
15 It will then be up to local Health Authorities and Hospital Trusts to decide for themselves what to invest in management development , if Conservative Government remains .
16 This will equal half the cost of the factory , which should be up to full production of body panels by the end of next year .
17 Wind notwithstanding , Charles decided to go ahead and experiment , initially on an eighty-acre block of land at Highgrove ; this has proved so successful that , by the end of 1991 , all the arable land on the farm will be up to organic farming standards .
18 ‘ We expected all the equipment to be up to Olympic standard .
19 In other instances medical intervention via naso-gastric feeding may be necessary to aid the child gain weight sufficiently to be out of immediate danger ( Goldbloom 1984 ) .
20 When it drops to minimum it may fall to 15 , and will be out of binocular range for some time .
21 ‘ But he should be out of intensive care soon . ’
22 She was said last night to be out of intensive care and making progress .
23 They can hardly bear to be out of physical contact with the machine and when they are they carry their printouts around with them .
24 After all , as Dad quite rightly explained , if the entire country flung its brushed nylon to the winds , we 'd be out of detached splendour and into the gutter within a week .
25 He seems to be enjoying it , but he has a weak chest and really he should n't be out on cold winter afternoons .
26 They should be encouraged to be out for short walks from the second week after they arrive home .
27 The framework is due to be out with major OEMs and key users in early 1993 .
28 ‘ The snow-ploughs wo n't be out till early morning , and if you 'd got stuck in the middle of nowhere … ’
29 Even in the heavy rain she had to be out in clean air , running among the trees , anywhere other than inside the hot chamber of her skull .
30 The crocuses will soon be out in full bloom along Grange Road and they will look towards the sky in fresh beauty .
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