Example sentences of "must [be] [verb] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 But any suggestion of confidence in the players ' ability to perform on the field must be tempered by worries over their ability to handle life off it .
2 For example , if objective regimes are to be regarded as creating rights erga omnes they must be incorporated within Articles 34–38 , or the principles with respect to them be regarded as sui generis .
3 expresses the involuntariness with which firms , no less than workers , must be acting during periods of unemployment …
4 The most important thing to remember is that every idea , comment or observation must be supported by facts or reasons .
5 He explained that first I must promise not to fight against Lilliput or hurt Lilliputians , and that I must be searched for weapons .
6 The result has been that in many GIS spatial queries initiated by the user must be formulated in terms of a software-specific command language .
7 There is , and must remain , a gulf between home and school which must not be eliminated , though it must be crossed by bridges at various points .
8 It must be demoralising for workers to be working alongside people who are being paid twice for doing the same job .
9 It is , of course , true that such officers in many cases have powers which enable them to do lawfully what a private person might not do , but the question whether their acts are justified by their powers must be decided in proceedings before the ordinary courts .
10 The anti-conspiratorial , and ostensibly pro-Zionist , rhetoric of Vanguard must be examined in terms of these argumentative possibilities .
11 Because they contain water , they must be stored in conditions where the temperature will not drop below 5°C , and must not be applied in cold , damp conditions , or when there is high humidity .
12 More frequently the deposit of a hoard must be dated from coins it contains which are independently datable , if there are any .
13 They all concern , in different ways , the appearance-reality distinction , because cognisance must be understood in terms of our drawing this distinction in every area of our mental life .
14 In this paper we shall argue that the Act must be understood in terms of themes , issues , developments and conflicts that emerged in the 1970s , and worked themselves out in the 1980s .
15 Coherence , however , must be understood in terms of value , of ‘ what ought to be ’ .
16 Public enterprise is part of the state ; its logic of action , and hence the functioning of its industrial relations , must be understood in terms of the place that it occupies within the state .
17 Coming from a country where the use of the appropriate word is more important than a gesture in daily life , both choreographers have resolved that words must be replaced by gestures within the choreographic design .
18 Certain individuals must be named as respondents to the proceedings .
19 Packets ( both Letter and Small Packet services ) are liable to Customs examination and must be declared to Customs authorities on special forms .
20 The registered office of a defendant limited company or any place of business of the defendant company which has some real connection with the cause or matter in issue must be given for purposes of service ( Ord 7 , r 14(2) ) .
21 But if worship is the foundation of all the Church 's other activities , greater priority must be given to matters liturgical and musical , even at the expense of some subjects which at present form part of the syllabus .
22 What instructions must be given to nurses caring for the patient ?
23 Attention must be given to ways in which pressure groups secure or resist policies through their power to take actions that directly affect either the success of policies or the stability of the political system .
24 If the word length is short , consideration must be given to methods for achieving an adequate address range with a short operand field .
25 When it comes to evangelising , Michael Green reminds us , ‘ Evangelism is never proclamation in a vacuum ; but always to people , and the message must be given in terms that make sense to them ’ ( Green 1970:115 ) .
26 This means that sporadic frontraising ( found mainly in West Belfast ) in such words as flat , trap ( [ flΕt , trΕp ] ) must be seen as residues and not as innovations .
27 Rather , they must be seen as sets of roles which , as soon as they exist , exploit one another and are thus engaged in the class struggle .
28 If so , the problems we have surveyed must be seen as symptoms rather than causes ‘ more ’ and ‘ better ’ are apt to be palliatives , not cures .
29 Hence , if evidence is found to support the existence of a North-South divide , this must be seen in terms of measures of ‘ averages ’ for particular regions .
30 He proposes that the production of consciousness must be seen in terms of two relationships that Marx analyses independently .
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