Example sentences of "[be] fully [verb] by the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 From our laboratory , it has previously been reported that the acid stimulatory effect of gastrin can be fully explained by the stimulation of histamine release .
2 Development of the avionics system for the bat-shaped B-2 bomber is at least two years behind schedule and the system may not be fully developed by the time the aircraft is to be deployed in the middle of the next decade .
3 Will the nurses ' pay review in Wales be fully funded by the Government ?
4 The government will be putting up 50 per cent of the cost of commercial projects in the four key areas , although academic work will be fully funded by the Department of Education and Science ( DES ) .
5 Eventually she convinces the caller that the timing is somewhat inconvenient as the square will be fully occupied by the parade ; a revised time is agreed and another crisis is averted .
6 Coyne will be fully recovered by the time The Godfathers head off for European and American dates by the end of the month , but the British dates can not be rescheduled until early autumn .
7 My hon. Friend has made an excellent point , succinctly put , which has not yet been fully recognised by the Treasury .
8 For instance on page 57 of the status report , we read : ‘ If equilibrium had not yet been fully established by the time of the switch back at the end of 1979 , then later equilibrium state Pb-206/Pb-207 ratios would presumably be lower than those seen in 1979 .
9 The textile business is still ailing , but the two newer divisions have become increasingly important although their potential has not been fully appreciated by the market .
10 There is a kind of infantile betrayal — the kitten says , ‘ I am all soft , ’ and then , when this statement has been fully trusted by the child , the animal strikes out painfully and draws blood .
11 The Law Lords found that she should have been fully informed by the bank that she was risking her whole house by guaranteeing a loan to her husband 's business , not the limited amount she believed at the time .
12 We ensure that those remits are fully understood by the project team before work starts .
13 Children under 2 years of age are fully covered by the insurance when travelling with an insured person .
14 Now if they ensure that , should the garage go into liquidation , or albeit the warranty company , then they are fully covered by the insurance company .
15 Whatever their private reservations , Ministers were fully persuaded by the Ballot that their appearance of half-heartedness towards the League and sanctions had become a most serious electoral liability .
16 Let us assume that the directive is fully supported by the Government , who do not wish to amend one jot or comma of it and who are willing to sign up to its immediate implementation .
17 The expression of conditions of existence , so often insisted on by the illustrious Cuvier , is fully embraced by the principle of natural selection .
18 Mondrian 's style was fully formed by the time he arrived in New York — ‘ Broadway Boogie Woogie ’ does n't have all that much to do with cruising Broadway .
19 Mr Lee was fully supported by the Chairman of the Social Work Committee , Councillor Mairhi Trickett .
20 This finding was fully supported by the evidence of Dr. G. , a consultant psychiatrist specialising in anorexia nervosa , who examined W. on the instructions of the Official Solicitor at a time when he was acting as W. 's guardian ad litem .
21 It was fully recognised by the Government , moreover , that it would take some years for normal conditions to be restored .
22 This resource was fully realised by the Home Office who recommended that deaf men should be recruited as Air Raid Wardens ( A.R.P 's ) and firewatchers , and many deaf men did in fact serve in these capacities , and also as stretcher-bearers in air-raid conditions .
23 This incisive and glittering playing of the boisterous outer movements was fully matched by the orchestra , showing no signs of uneasiness with the demanding and energetic rhythms .
24 in respect of which the trial judge was bound by a decision of the Court of Appeal or House of Lords and which in either case was fully considered by the trial judge or in the previous decisions by which the trial judge was bound ; and
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