Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [noun] [verb] down in " in BNC.

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1 When we turn from LETTERS to Sabbatical ( 1982 ) , the latter seems almost to have been written to put into practice the theoretical position laid down in ‘ The Literature of Replenishment ’ .
2 The constitution is not seen in the rosy terms set down in Chapter 1 , but neither is democracy seen in the new gloomy terms set down in Chapters 2 and 3 .
3 The four-seater Cessna came down in a wood near Hambledon in Buckinghamshire spreading wreckage over a wide area .
4 The four-seater Cessna came down in a wood near Hambledon in Buckinghamshire spreading wreckage over a wide area .
5 The assessor will observe the trainee performing a unit of competence in the work environment , ask any relevant questions and then decided whether the candidate is competent by judging the performance against the recognised criteria laid down in the NVQ standards .
6 THE MIGHTY Kangaroos touched down in Manchester yesterday and betrayed their Wembley nerves .
7 The snow-light filling the house with magic as the white flakes drifted down in the windless silence , the splendour where the sun came out and the hills and fields and trees sparkled under the arc of blue sky , the thought of the things one did in the snow , tobogganing and snowballing , and building a snowman : it was all ecstasy .
8 It would be necessary , if the evidence were to be admitted under that doctrine , that the three conditions laid down in Ladd v. Marshall should be fulfilled .
9 During the boom of the 1980s , they made massive investments in new production , but now that new factories and assembly lines are finally in operation they find the domestic market bogged down in recession , protectionism rising in key export markets and the yen rocketing to historic highs .
10 These principles expand upon the basic standards set down in the rules of Conduct and indicate the standards which members should seek to achieve in the interests of good practice .
11 It would be churlish to suggest that either RWC or the Italian Federation fell down in some areas because of a lack of will to make the event succeed .
12 The job description shall be consistent with the contractual duties laid down in this agreement .
13 In the convent passage the Sacred Heart looked down in reproach .
14 The Acts of Parliament , although applying to Scotland , use the English spelling , as do the various forms laid down in the Acts in connection with the representation at Westminster .
15 Nevertheless the general approach laid down in Rogers v. Parish ( Scarborough ) Ltd. applies equally to second-hand vehicles Business Applications Specialists Ltd. v. Nationwide Credit Corpn .
16 Mr. Beazley also relied on the general statements of principle in paragraphs 9 and 10 of the Peters case [ 1983 ] E.C.R. 987 quoted above , which he submitted echoed the general principles laid down in the Gubisch case [ 1987 ] E.C.R. 4861 ; these are important principles , to which full weight must be given , but they can not in my judgment warrant the court placing a construction on the words of article 5(1) which they can not reasonably bear , and moreover they must be balanced against another general principle , laid down for example in Kalfelis v. Bankhaus Schrôder , Mûnchmeyer , Hengst and Co .
17 A good example is the Civil Aviation Authority determining entitlement to an air transport licence in accordance with the general objectives laid down in the legislation .
18 The Anglo-Saxon cathedral burned down in 1067 , and the Norman Archbishop Lanfranc had the current cathedral built on almost exactly the same site .
19 He knew he was very much in the reckoning to skip a Northern Ireland rink in next year 's Commonwealth Games in Canada and yesterday 's double defeat could well be talked about when the Irish selectors sit down in the not too distant future to pick their side .
20 Further important subsurface information comes from the several boreholes put down in the search for coal by the Department of Commerce on the advice of the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland .
21 Relations between the two companies broke down in December 1975 , when Virgin 's lawyers terminated the contract , with the Clarkes claiming that Virgin owed them money .
22 Ten minutes later , after Nina had made mugs of tea for them both , the two women sat down in Rachel 's office .
23 The two men sat down in red velvet chairs on opposite sides of the cold fireplace , glared at by Christ and the Pope .
24 To his annoyance he found that the Treasurer 's office was now completely empty except for the four telephones set down in a row on the bare boards of the floor .
25 The banks having failed to bring themselves within any of the special jurisdictions laid down in article 5 or 6 , article 2 prevails , and Glasgow must be sued in their court of domicile in Scotland .
26 The defendants applied to have the plaintiffs ' actions struck out on the ground that the proper forum for any claim against them was Scotland and that the special jurisdiction laid down in articles 5 and 6 of the Convention on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters 1968 , scheduled to the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982did not apply so as to permit the defendants to be sued in England , notwithstanding that they were domiciled in Scotland .
27 It is therefore also common ground that prima facie Glasgow must be sued in Scotland because of course it is domiciled in Scotland , and that the banks are only entitled to sue in England if they can bring themselves within the special jurisdiction laid down in articles 5 and 6 of Schedule 4 .
28 Only the clown 's head survived when the Fun House burned down in a £10 million blaze four months ago .
29 Presently the flying head touched down in a crash which was at least semi-controlled .
30 ‘ The constitutional function performed by courts of justice as interpreters of the written law laid down in Acts of Parliament is often described as ascertaining ‘ the intention of Parliament ; ’ but what this metaphor , though convenient , omits to take into account is that the court , when acting in its interpretative role , as well as when it is engaged in reviewing the legality of administrative action , is doing so as mediator between the state in the exercise of its legislative power and the private citizen for whom the law made by Parliament constitutes a rule binding upon him and enforceable by the executive power of the state .
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