Example sentences of "[coord] range of [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Promotions aim to attract the customer 's attention to a new product or range of products .
2 Sometimes the product or range of products is too heavy to carry easily .
3 In the majority of cases however , the valuation engagement will be value added , where the firm uses information , which may already have been the subject of validation , enquiry and analytical procedures or information gathering work , to derive a conclusion in the form of an estimated value or range of values for a particular purpose .
4 The contract specifies : what is being exchanged ( e.g. cash for a good , cash for a service , a good for a good , a good for a service , cash for cash , etc. ) , the price at which the exchange takes place , and the date ( or range of dates ) in the future at which the exchange takes place .
5 There is a continual need to appraise existing techniques , to seek refinements and to search out new instrumental methods of examination which have more to offer in speed , accuracy or range of elements found .
6 Is there an optimum payout ratio or range of ratios that maximizes the current worth of shares ? ’
7 John Major was asked about VAT during the election campaign and said there were no plans and no need to increase the rate of tax or range of goods covered .
8 The program can provide statistics for any year or range of years , it can also generate a text file of your list ( in two formats ) that can be viewed with any text editor .
9 Colleges could match the needs of the Catholic school system either in numbers or range of subjects .
10 These four divisions or ‘ compartments ’ of management style are really a simplification of a ‘ continuum ’ or range of styles , from the most dictatorial to the most laissez-faire .
11 In contrast to the type of evaluation that assessed by purely quantitative techniques and data , this strategy or range of techniques could investigate and respond to the complex nature of user education .
12 Obtaining an entry for update or the creation of a new entry requires the lexicographer to be a member of a group which owns the bundle ( or range of entries ) to which the entry belongs .
13 Promotional advertising informs the public of an item or range of items in stock .
14 Second , it is commonly the case that what is highlighted or backgrounded is an attribute , or range of attributes , of the entity referred to .
15 Mr Pearse , a lifelong clearing banker , has inspired new confidence in the staff , and streamlined the bank 's retail network and range of products .
16 To lay the foundations in North West England for a regional business of sufficient scale , depth of resources and range of products to compete effectively against larger operators .
17 Anglo-Welsh have stated that one of their principal objectives is ‘ to lay the foundations in North West England for a regional business of sufficient scale , depth of resources and range of products to compete effectively against larger operators ’ .
18 His intellect and range of interests were wide and profound .
19 An archaeologist who has transformed the way people think about his area of study ; a communicator who can make an enthralling TV programme ; a lover of contemporary art who has persuaded the Fellows of his Cambridge college at least to tolerate biannual sculpture shows ( one of which involved digging up the hallowed lawns ) ; and now , since his peerage which gives him the forum of Britain 's Upper House , a politician , with strong views on how to preserve the world 's history as encapsulated in its archaeology : Colin Renfrew at fifty-five has an enviable career and range of interests .
20 To understand it , we need first to look at the development of Nietzsche 's inner life : the particular temperament and range of interests without which the controversial book would never have been written at all .
21 The many levels and manifestations of town twinning , as developed by the twinning committee , have much in common with the variety and range of activities which might be shared between a college or school and a company , as developed by the partnership committee .
22 Thus doctors agreed with scientists that for the sake of the welfare of the race , women 's intellectual development and range of activities should be severely curtailed .
23 Occupational welfare may include tangible benefits such as non-contributory pensions , company cars or cheap loans , but may also refer to less tangible aspects of employment like the number and range of hours worked , the working environment and effects on health or future prospects .
24 Thus it is not surprising that responses to the questionnaire were varied in quality and range of answers .
25 To ask the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry if he will indicate the nature and range of discussions he has had with OFTEL on the length of time customers have had to wait to have their telephones repaired ; what changes in waiting time there have been in the last seven years ; and if he will make a statement .
26 It would seem difficult to provide a relevant stock of materials and range of services without being aware of these changing factors .
27 In addition to the classification granted to indicate the scope and range of services and facilities provided by appointed hotels , the AA assesses them subjectively to highlight aspects of their operation which are of particular merit .
28 And obviously not one to hide the light of his firm — or the cause of the chartered surveyor — under a bushel with regard to the property audit , he said : ‘ We see this as further endorsement of the quality and range of services which we are equipped to offer both the private and public sectors . ’
29 In addition , questions of quality in the British context are particularly difficult to answer because of the complexity and range of services provided by the NHS and the wide-ranging but incomplete responsibilities health authorities have for the health of their populations .
30 They had to be flexible , too , adjusting to the new post-war broadcast medium of television ; then to a new scale and range of programmes , increasingly controversial , and to changes in the society they served ; and above all to the introduction of what at first was known as ‘ commercial television ’ in 1955 .
  Next page