Example sentences of "be [adv] [vb pp] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 This newly created honourary office carried with it ex officio membership of the executive committee so that , it was hoped Ayliffe 's years of experience would not be wholly lost to the Association by his decision not to offer himself for reelection as President .
2 If evolutionary theory can be successfully extended to the assembly of the mind and the creation of cultural diversity , the result may well rank as the completion of the Darwinian revolution .
3 The collection from the nest was made within a few days of the fledglings leaving the nest , and the broken up and trampled remains of pellets and bones from the nest can be mostly attributed to the regurgitated pellets of the fledglings .
4 It is not uncommon for women to have children by several different fathers and men may often be loosely attached to a number of households at the same time .
5 No patients would be identified and the information would be confidentially passed to the British Medical Association and then on to the Home Office .
6 Perhaps some consideration might be additionally given to the current situation regarding the lack of protection for the current situation regarding the lack of protection for the interiors of unlisted buildings within conservation areas … ’
7 If the Saatchi Collection were to be dispersed , it is true to say that a whole era of international art would be effectively lost to the nation .
8 If it does then the term will be effectively promoted to the rank of condition with all that that entails , otherwise it will be classed as a warranty .
9 Discuss the merits of this approach and provide examples of how the mailing can be effectively directed to the best targets .
10 He realised , as did later choreographers , that the steps and patterns of such material had to be properly displayed to the audience , not just danced for themselves .
11 There remains , however , considerable debate concerning how a rule might be precisely defined and how such a construct can be properly applied to the study of social behaviour .
12 Consequently , many sites have benefited from archaeological research , and in some cases excavation , in order to be properly presented to the visitors .
13 There are a number of men only too anxious to buy themselves a knighthood who might be most attracted to a project that catches the public sympathy . ’
14 The testing arrangements : The national curriculum will be intimately connected to the assessment and testing schedule at years seven , 11 , 14 and 16 and the same concerns expressed in 3 a and b apply .
15 Smith was of opinion that adequate protection could be given by keeping a mobile force ready , who , on warning of danger , could be swiftly moved to the danger area ; but , if police were to be billeted in the colliery , 70 would be sufficient .
16 Although mountaineers will not need reminded , the less experienced need to be constantly alerted to the fact that a hot , sunny car park does not necessarily mean a benign hill-walk .
17 The kitchen is a workplace in its own right ; there is a job to be done , and it will be impossible for the speechreader to deal with the matter in hand if eyes have to be constantly switched to the speaker 's face .
18 Whatever its precise terms an exclusion clause designed to operate on a national basis can not be justly applied to a party active in only one part of the country and putting up no candidates elsewhere .
19 Family cases should be only referred to a solicitor where detailed advice and negotiation about the arrangements to be made for financial provision and for the children were needed ; other civil cases should only be referred once it was clear that court proceedings should be initiated .
20 Clearly , the relevant funding body in England , the LEA , would need to be highly committed to the aim of ‘ equal opportunity ’ before making the necessary financial and administrative arrangements .
21 Therefore the observed O 3 changes can not be entirely attributed to the Mount Pinatubo eruption .
22 The size of the beds is much more easily appreciated , the spaces between them can be better compared to the dimensions of the beds , and the proportions of the various plants can be correctly assessed , so that mistakes in juxtaposition can be adjusted .
23 We must again remind ourselves that there was more than one episode of dinosaur extinction when food and dietary factors have had equal relevance , although each succeeding ( and changed ) species seemed to be better fitted to an ecologically evolved environment .
24 In defence he was steady and reliable even if , in a way , his sophisticated refined play was out of its element in the hurly-burly of 3rd Division South football ; Jimmy always appeared to be better suited to a more leisurely pace than that which usually pertained at Selhurst Park in the mid-1950s .
25 Use pattern that is appropriate to the style and size of your home — a small sprig design looks far more at home in a Victorian cottage than a grand , formally patterned carpet that would be better suited to a large room .
26 Both the previous meal , which was regurgitated prematurely , and the next , which starts with the advantage of high pH , would therefore be less exposed to the effects of stomach acids and the bone accordingly less strongly modified .
27 A further risk is that the smaller Fellowships become so , " special and different " that they may lose the wider identification with all sufferers from addictive disease and they may therefore be less exposed to the common humility that is the essential basis for recovery .
28 This is the county boundary , new since a revision in 1974 when the valleys of Garsdale and Dentdale , hitherto giving allegiance to Yorkshire , were decreed to be henceforth attached to the new county of Cumbria .
29 ( D5 ) can be optionally fitted to the board and merely indicates that characters are being received at the RS232 input .
30 Since such rules can be optionally applied to the same basic sentence structures , they provide a linguistic basis for the notion of * In this , as in subsequent chapters , we number examples and extracts only where we need to refer to them in the text .
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