Example sentences of "[be] [adv] [adj] to produce a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 There is the important question of which court is likely to produce the fairest result following a trial , and in certain cases a jury trial has a number of important procedural benefits which are more likely to produce a just result .
2 The F-14 is based on elderly technology , and it would be extremely expensive to produce a workable bomber from it , something on the order of $50m a copy .
3 If an aircraft is very directionally stable because of a large fin , then the rudder will be less able to produce a large angle of yaw before this balance of forces occurs .
4 But it would be less obvious to produce a whole description of Dr Demulch in perhaps a mildly humorous vein : " Dr Demulch was a brown man .
5 This will form a braid or plait very common in Aran knitting With a selection of these traditional braids and cables it would be very easy to produce a typical Aran sweater on your machine .
6 In a chapter of this length it is not possible to produce a comprehensive guide to the practice of international selling and exporting and indeed this is not the objective .
7 This shows that it is still possible to produce a useful and innovative medicine without the huge financial and technical resources that are at the disposal of the multinational corporations .
8 The proactive approach involves considerably more effort but is more likely to produce a positive result .
9 Industry analysts had long predicted a shake-out of the overcrowded low-alcohol ale market ( it is virtually impossible to produce a no-alcohol ale ) .
10 It is certainly possible to produce a few general rules , and some will be given in this course , just as a few general rules for word stress were given in Chapters 10 and 11 .
11 Secondly , there was recognition that direct access to the tribunals by claimants was not apt to produce a fair result in every case .
12 But the plan 's ‘ Check List of Action Required ’ in this regard ( HMSO , 1965 , p. 17 ) was hardly adequate to produce a rapid improvement , and in many cases the ‘ action ’ was deferred : ‘ studies will be made , industry by industry of ways of increasing exports ’ ; ‘ Plans will be made , industry by industry , to save imports ’ ( ibid . ) .
13 Admittedly , even at the end of our period , Thomas More still wrote some major works in Latin , but these were the works of a humanist scholar thinking of an international audience , and he was also prepared to produce an English version of the History of Richard 111 and to write his Confutation of Tyndale in the vernacular .
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