Example sentences of "[vb mod] be expect [verb] a [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | To begin with , I pay tribute to an intervention made by the hon. Member for Wolverhampton , South-West ( Mr. Budgen ) who , earlier today , rightly pointed out that in a democracy Parliament should be expected to debate a measure such as this in a sane and sensible fashion . |
2 | Nor do I see why caregivers should be expected to sustain a focus on personal relationships which would not ordinarily exist in the encounters between young people and adults . |
3 | 17.18 All pupils should be expected to keep a file containing work in progress , as well as completed pieces , which may need to be selected and filed separately for the purposes of moderation and final assessment . |
4 | Plays were constantly revived and while the Master of the Revels might be expected to relicense a revival , this did not frequently happen . |
5 | The group also included Treasury ministers , who might be expected to support a change to private insurance if anyone would . |
6 | There is a powerful body of opinion in the defence establishment which supports such a ban , on the grounds that the US Navy 's superiority can only be reinforced if its Soviet counterpart is deprived of the only weapons which could be expected to destroy a US aircraft carrier with a single hit . |
7 | Over 1.5 million people visit the Tate annually and could be expected to find a Tate magazine an attractive purchase . |
8 | Both were sister papers of established dailies , the Telegraph and Mail , which could be expected to provide a core of readers and whose presses had spare capacity . |
9 | Jones 's team produced a new , more comprehensive plan which , though still based on the CEGB 's tiny ( two-mile radius ) evacuation zone , could be expected to run a lot more efficiently than its predecessor . |
10 | In one organization managers may be expected to take a directive style in the management of their subordinates . |
11 | For example , the hearer may be expected to access a range of contextual assumptions about the effort of running up hills . |
12 | ‘ Dr Courtney was in the position of a professional man , a gynaecologist , whom women would be expecting to uphold a position of trust . |
13 | Thus , excluding those with intervention , about 1000 out of 1600 patients would be expected to have a stenosis of more than 60% , despite an absence of clinical evidence of ischaemia and the negative exercise test . |
14 | Most Japanese with experience in dealing with Westerners will be expecting to use a handshake rather than a bow . |
15 | A recent scrutiny of public sector job advertisements reveals such phrases as : ‘ You will be expected to take a lead on all aspects of work in the Division . ’ |
16 | The successful candidate will be expected to lead a team of two to three graduates engaged in the determination of pesticide and agrochemical residues in crops and soils . |
17 | Experience in computing , preferably in maintenance and trouble-shooting , is essential , and the successful candidate will be expected to develop a commitment to delivering an efficient service to the users . |
18 | You will be expected to keep a drink diary throughout the course , and make attempts at reducing the amount you drink if it is greater than accepted healthy drinking levels . |
19 | Never before has a Government sought to cut the free limit , so that millions of people seeking legal aid will be expected to pay a contribution they can not afford . |
20 | Britain can be expected to use a series of meetings to resist such proposals . |
21 | Customers or consumers can be expected to judge a product by their own taste or good sense . |
22 | France are the only member of the Five Nations to accept an invitation , although it can be expected to see a number of England 's high-order in the Barbarians side and Irish charm amongst the Irish Wolfhounds . |
23 | Vauxhall can be expected to start a flurry of limited-edition Astras in the lead-up to the new model 's launch in September . |
24 | The relevance of this analysis for out present purposes is that if contextual cues are helpful in retrieving associative information quite generally , then both of the associations formed during conditioned suppression training can be expected to suffer a loss when the context is changed . |