Example sentences of "such [art] [noun sg] [modal v] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Two , the could proceed without the landlord 's licence , it would then be up to the landlord to apply to the court to have the lease forfeited when you could arrange the defence that you were a reasonable tenant and as such the assignment should have been allowed to permit this course of action but of course you are using bank money as well as your own and the bank would be unhappy to lend money in a situation where there was a possibility , albeit a slight , that the lease would be forfeited .
2 As such the Centre may also be a blueprint of how central government could support wildlife conservation on redundant farmland and enable existing farming families to remain on the land with the new role of guardians of the traditional countryside and its wildlife .
3 If some components have to be physically larger than the space provided or require other " upstream " or " downstream " components to be modified as well , then the consequences of pursuing such a concept must be similarly recognized at an early stage .
4 Such a trial would be unethical , however , given the unfavourable risk/benefit ratio of cyclosporin treatment in this setting .
5 There are virtually no placebo controlled trials of acute relapse of extensive ulcerative colitis with which to compare these results , and such a trial would be unethical .
6 Perhaps no society which had surmounted such a trial could consider itself as simply one power amongst many .
7 1.43 It was said in Coenen v Payne [ 1974 ] 1 WLR 984 ( which was a defendant 's application for a split trial ) that such a trial will be ordered whenever it is just and convenient , and not only in difficult and unusual cases , and in Ashworth v Berkeley Walbrood ( 1984 ) The Times , 13 July that the court can be asked to try a preliminary issue whenever there is a real probability that the effect will be to save time and expense and simplify the issues , which need not be limited to questions of law .
8 But there are several billion people in the world to whom such a coincidence could happen , so the apparent coincidence is actually not as great as it seems .
9 He made such thorough notes that it was then no great labour to produce a similar Biographical Register for Cambridge ( 1963 ) — in 1958 he estimated that such a work could be completed within eighteen months — and a more summary Survey of Dominicans in England , based on the Ordination Lists in Episcopal Registers ( 1268–1538 ) ( Rome , 1967 ) .
10 Yet , unless a real emergency should occur , it was difficult to see how such a government might be brought about .
11 Thus , despite widespread support for a National Government , there was little idea of how such a government might be brought about ; and little support for it among those who really mattered .
12 They set up a dichotomy thus : ‘ Rather than scheming as to what a Left-Labour government should do , it is vital to consider the political basis on which such a government will become a possibility . ’
13 I therefore contend that ‘ scheming as to what a Left-Labour government should do ’ — in the sense of attempting to elaborate credible options for policy at a national level , while recognising the real problems involved — is actually a rather important part of developing ‘ the political basis on which such a government will become a possibility ’ .
14 I have quoted these latter points at length because I can readily agree with them , and consider them important , but what I find politically weakening is the dichotomy between promoting socialist developments which do not depend on the existence of a socialist government and the stigmatised ‘ scheming ’ as to what such a government should do .
15 The financial measures consistently improved the lot of the already better off while worsening that of the badly off … such a Government can not promote community . ’
16 Clearly , a list of observation statements acquired in such a way would form a very unsatisfactory basis for the respective generalizations .
17 To see a parent — someone he thinks of as being all-powerful and ever-capable — reacting in such a way must induce in the child the belief that whatever it is that is causing such terror must be dreadful indeed and that he , therefore , should be equally terrified .
18 The shadows of a mouse projected upon the wall in such a way could make us believe a monster lurked around the corner .
19 ‘ Highlighting sexual harassment in such a way can have a totally detrimental effect , ’ he said .
20 Such a revaluation might make a paper and cash offer for the remaining 85% of Midland 's shares feasible .
21 With a carefully enough computed dimple pattern , such a sheet could show any desired image .
22 To most Englishmen such a conjunction will be unbelievable ; but , on returning to England , he may find himself wondering how he has finally accepted the Spanish view .
23 Apart from the need to preserve some semblance of pride , she knew such a retreat would cause her to lose her hold on the blankets .
24 And such a master would certainly take note of the manners and appearance that help in some degree to reveal the character .
25 Such a threat may constitute a bluff in that the prime minister would have more to lose if an election was called than would most MPs ( the PM could lose office : most seats are safe seats and so most MPs could expect to be reelected ) , but nonetheless it has proved a potent influence in determining parliamentary behaviour .
26 She hoped such a threat would put the fear of God in him , not least because he had a particular loathing for competition , and the idea that his own stepson might join forces with the opposition and take with him all manner of secrets was too much to stomach .
27 It is not clear why such a threat should be regarded as inadequate , nor does Professor Williams indicate the circumstances in which a threat to withhold a benefit to which a woman is entitled should suffice .
28 Circumstances could be envisaged in which such a threat could be most material to a woman .
29 As this suggests , the appeal of such a tune could be seen as a ‘ leftover ’ , an ‘ echo ’ of a bygone era of craftsmanship ; and Adorno recognizes the possibility of this — indeed , he acknowledges that it is precisely in popular music that the category of the ‘ idea ’ ( a relatively independent , memorable element within a totality , a phenomenon more or less abandoned by ‘ serious ’ music ) lives on , and with it a sense of creative spontaneity ( Adorno 1976 : 34–7 ) .
30 Such a re-examination could be ‘ a landmark in penal history and illumine the course ahead for a generation ’ .
  Next page