Example sentences of "must [verb] at [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 First , variation in a character must exist at the outset of the evolutionary process .
2 In fact in Duru [ 1976 ] 1 WLR 2 the Court of Appeal thought that both charges in relation to the thing in action represented by the cheque and to the paper itself were to be upheld but the judges ' minds were not directed at this issue whether property must exist at the time of the obtaining .
3 Arranging to receive goods before they have been stolen does not amount to handling : Park ( 1988 ) 87 Cr App R 164 ( CA ) , because " guilty knowledge must exist at the time when the offence is committed " .
4 ‘ Trade union involvement must remain at the heart of the party but it must be based far more on individual choice and decision rather than through the exercise of a block vote , ’ he said .
5 It would have been impossible to have brought an airliner into the gallery — they must remain at the Museum 's ‘ out-station ’ at Wroughton , Wilts , but the next best thing was achieved .
6 If a motor vehicle is stationary when the accident occurs the driver must remain at the scene until he has satisfied the section .
7 Until that time your child must remain at the place named on the supervision requirement .
8 On Mr Clinton 's menu , deficit-reduction must stay at the top .
9 Ashley was glaring at me over the candle flame the way a hawk must glare at a field mouse the instant before it parts mouse from field forever .
10 This will help to avoid clouds of falling soot from blowing into the room through the air vent which you must install at the bottom of the closed flue .
11 Officials are particularly strict in the capital , Suva , where arriving yachts must wait at the quarantine buoy , or anchor nearby until visited by the medical officer .
12 It is not a condition of the relief that a trainee must qualify at the end of a course .
13 Any commentary must acknowledge at the outset the difficulty in effectively representing diversity of both sectors in terms of quality , quantity and of ‘ style ’ , that is to say , in the attitudes and values that underpin service .
14 you would have more information on that than Milvia would have for that , after they done the SATS and they 're marked reports have to be sent out , we must report at the end of key stage three .
15 The change in emphasis was noted in 1893 by another Baptist minister , Thomas Morris : ‘ It is the fashion of the present day to exaggerate the importance and power of circumstances ’ , to put ‘ society ’ above individuals , whereas Christianity , he argued , ‘ must begin at the centre , and not at the circumference . ’
16 But I must begin at the beginning .
17 We must begin at the point of the individual 's , or group 's , needs and perceptions .
18 To begin either action , the plaintiff must file at the court office a formal request to the registrar , now the district judge , to issue a summons to commence the action together with the particulars of claim .
19 Mind you must remember at the time when he was fighting to put it through , the bill through parliament , the whole B M A , British Medical Association were against him , to a man .
20 You must look at a film of him and do all you can to emulate his behaviour . ’
21 First , we must look at the present .
22 I do n't think we should look for fundamental changes now but we must look at the configuration of services
23 We look at the sun through smoked glass ; we must look at the past through coloured glass .
24 Thus the examiner must look at the bottom of the page as well as the top in order to find his way to the new question .
25 The Court of Appeal said that the court must look at the wording and surrounding circumstances to find out what interest the clause was intended to protect .
26 To overcome this barrier , I suggest , one must look at the approach in action ; only then will it be possible to see what it has achieved , and to assess what it might achieve if taken on its own terms .
27 Before we turn to that material we must look at the course the narrative has taken since the beginning of Genesis , reminding ourselves yet again of familiar events , and skimming through areas we have not looked at so far .
28 We must look at the behaviour from a properly defined structural viewpoint .
29 Even if it were true , as some scientific students of law believe , that a past service can not support a future promise , you must look at the document and see if the promise can not receive a proper effect in some other way .
30 In order to ascertain whether or not a particular trust is or is not charitable you must look at the preamble to the statute of Elizabeth I , the Charitable Uses Act 1601 and the classification by Lord Macnaghten in Commissioners for the Special Purposes of Income Tax v. Pemsel and the reported cases generally .
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