Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] to [pron] [prep] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 There is some support for the proposition that such a loan , if made to a person fully capable of repaying the same and , for instance , charged against property in the United Kingdom , gives the taxpayer minimal benefit from the case of O " Leary v McKinlay [ 1991 ] STC 42 where Vinelott J at p51 , dealing with a Schedule E beneficial loan , stated the following : If an employer lends money to an employee free of interest or at a favourable rate of interest and if the employee is free to exploit the money in any manner he chooses his employment can not be said to have been the source of the income derived from the exploitation ; the employer is the source of the money and the taxpayer is assessable to tax under Sch E on the benefit to him of obtaining the loan on the terms on which the loan was made ; but if the loan is repayable on demand that benefit can not be quantified and form the basis of an assessment under Sch E. It is arguable if property is held by a non-resident trust for A for life and B absolutely that if the trustees lend money to A at interest then if A allows the trustees not to pursue him in his capacity as borrower for the interest that no benefit will arise .
2 And she was furious that Mr Clarke did not break the news to her before holding a Press conference .
3 He takes the belt to them for nicking one minute , and then the next he 's sending them out to do it .
4 Since development is far more important , it was argued , we should attract the cream to ourselves by offering competitive and lucrative wages .
5 So I came here to return the jade to you before going home . ’
6 This is important to individual sites so that they can make their own assessment of the value to them of adopting what has been identified as best practice elsewhere .
7 I do not think that we can turn back the tide of secularisation altogether in the area of dying , but we can call a halt to it by giving some serious thought to practices within our society and churches .
8 ‘ 3(1) Any assumption by a person of the rights of an owner amounts to an appropriation , and this includes , where he has come by the property ( innocently or not ) without stealing it , any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner .
9 ‘ 3(1) Any assumption by a person of the rights of an owner amounts to an appropriation , and this includes , where he has come by the property ( innocently or not ) without stealing it , any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner .
10 This result is probably implicit in the concept of appropriation ( or ‘ conversion ’ ) ; but it is made explicit by the provision in clause 3(1) that a person 's assumption of the rights of an owner ‘ includes , where he has come by the property ( innocently or not ) without stealing it , any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner . ’
11 There is an appropriation where in those circumstances he later assumes " a right to it by keeping or dealing with it as owner " .
12 He has come by the property without stealing it and has later assumed a right to it by keeping it .
13 In fact you sound as if you 've hardly a minute to yourself between looking after the grandchildren and caring for your husband .
14 It will act as a barrier to you in putting your own psychological discoveries directly to your reader .
15 That I think is my main concern , with a request in a sense to you for supporting that over the next year or so , because I 'll be trying to perhaps get invited to the meetings , and perhaps we 'll be inviting officers from the authority to join me in looking at ways of building up that local context in planning to get that into our formal planning systems .
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