Example sentences of "be to have [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The aim should be to have hard-wired network data connections in close proximity to all potential computer users .
2 We must ask how remote the resemblance can be to have selective value .
3 ‘ My advice would be to have locking wheel nuts fitted .
4 In total , 500 NHS patients are to have private operations .
5 Our approach to safety training via this route is compatible with the Wood Group competency standards policy as the objectives are to have competent staff in each division who hold nationally recognised qualifications .
6 TNC does not seem to recognize how worthwhile changes in assessment need to be ‘ slowed ’ by teachers and to have a wider impact on curriculum and teaching methods if they are to have beneficial consequences for achievement levels ; that such reform takes time and considerable teacher commitment ; and that a heavy investment in INSET is needed .
7 I believe this to be most important if we are to have rational investment decisions and efficient allocations of resources .
8 As with the Yashica and Minolta AF-SP , the 35mm lens means you have to get close to the action if your photos are to have real impact .
9 What is required in history , if girls are to have equal opportunity with boys in school , is both a full investigation and exposure of women 's past — recorded and documented in special women 's history books — plus an integration of women and their contribution to history within existing accounts .
10 Mrs Gales said they are to have temporary accommodation in the Water Park Community Centre .
11 These were the irregular marks of a pit saw and , to me , are a feature showing the hard work which went into them , reminding us of how lucky we are to have modern machinery .
12 While essential if the travelling public are to have reliable information about all services in all parts of the country , Mr Freeman 's reply reveals that ‘ there would be no obligation on operators to participate in producing a single national timetable . ’
13 There are two members I think have spoken from the Liberal benches concerning funding bureaucracy and I would agree entirely with what that means but they 've also mentioned in the same bet , budgetary control and if you 're going to control budgets , you have to have a minimal amount of bureaucracy and the function really of the head of the er of the project , er the head of the the post that 's now slipped into oblivion with this motion , would actually have been to do two things it would have been to hold the two groups together and it would have been to have overall control of that budget and it would n't have been easy and I would n't have like the job and I wouldn't 've applied for it and certainly would have been very difficult indeed .
14 Being highly centralized , the British system has not been to have powerful centres outside London from which groups of services can be conducted for that area , but to administer each of the important functions of government from Whitehall for the whole of the country .
15 Thomas Cook and his family were without doubt the single most important innovators , establishing not only a major business enterprise but methods of operation that were to have global implications .
16 Such incidents were symptomatic of tensions within the socialist movement that were to have long-term consequences .
17 His descendants were to have good reason for echoing such sentiments in relation to the behaviour of Henry VIII 's troops in Scotland .
18 His friendship with Polanski developed , and he and Robert Evans were to have major roles reserved for them in Nicholson 's life , personal and career .
19 In religious terms , these two exilic and post-exilic developments — i.e. the concentration upon ritual purity and the sharp differentiation in male — female social function — were to have far-reaching consequences for women .
20 Important innovations were introduced by the 1919 Act , which were to have far-reaching implications .
21 Nos. 44–51 were to have regenerative equipment and track brakes and cost £707 each .
22 The Party was very conscious of the fact that in spite of its large majority it had fared very badly in the inner urban areas , and it was without question this result which prompted Mrs Thatcher to state immediately after the election that policies for the inner city were to have top priority .
23 But if the spirit of the Marxist analysis is correct , we need to know the answer to a second question , ‘ Why , in a modern capitalist society , would major capitalists , whoever they might be , typically identify the bourgeois and national interests , even if Rockefeller , Lindsay and the other actual capitalists were to have different life histories ? ’
24 Many do not remain sufficiently long as temporary workers or with any one agency to be entitled to any rights even if they were to have dependent employee status .
25 The freehold maisonettes , proposed in 1922 were to have communal facilities run by servants in three shifts .
26 Thus , if a woman were to have sexual intercourse with a boy under 16 , this would be the offence of indecent assault by the woman even if the boy consented to , or instigated , the act .
27 Now it wo n't cure all the problems I 'm pretending that it will , but if we were to have proper seats , proper microphones , electronic voting I believe that it would show symbolically that the House of Commons was prepared to modernize itself and start doing a proper job in our democracy rather than the farce and the theatre which frankly turns so many people off in modern Britain .
28 It is interesting that a number of individuals on the Sandford Review Committee felt that there was a need to establish a new type of national park zone ; these were to be ‘ inner ’ National Heritage Areas , where the claims of conservation were to have clear priority .
29 Indeed the changes wrought by the Prussians were to have enormous consequences for the formation of nationalist opinion in the city after the First World War , and it is important to see the extent to which these policies provided the basis of German identity and political purpose in the east , and provoked the very Polish nationalist response they supposedly sought to suppress or prevent .
30 The 19th century saw two significant changes in the newspaper industry which were to have considerable impact on future developments .
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