Example sentences of "it is [adv] necessary consider " in BNC.

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1 He considers that it is not necessary to consider the development of combustion technology in this scale because only relatively small quantities of fuel are used on comparison with the number of passenger journeys .
2 It is not necessary to consider what would have been the effect of the payment of £20 if it had been made in full satisfaction of the demand against Hunter .
3 It is not necessary to consider the facts further in this case , since Hambros Jersey does not challenge the judge 's view on the way the court 's discretion under rule 12.12 should be exercised ( save on the one point I have rejected ) .
4 In the circumstances , it is not necessary to consider in any detail the judge 's assessment of damages and the right of the defendants to commission .
5 It is not necessary to consider volume alone as the " excess ' parameter which becomes significant at Tg .
6 In deciding this it is not necessary to consider whether members of the public who are knowledgeable about the product are deceived , it may be sufficient if members of the public who have very little knowledge of the product concerned are likely to be deceived , see J. Bollinger v Costa Bravo Wine Co .
7 In the tort of negligence , it is frequently necessary to consider the machinery as to proof of negligence — the burden of proof , functions of judge and jury , res ipsa loquitur .
8 While these activities are fundamental to ensure that the mechanics of the budgetary process work , it is also necessary to consider the management activities which should take place .
9 Having now examined the objectives and formal structural characteristics of trade unions in market-type economies , it is also necessary to consider their more informal organisation at workplace level since , in many Western European countries during the post-World War II period , there has been a notable growth of bargaining at plant level — often outside official union channels — along with a progressive enlargement of its scope ( see Chapter 4 ) .
10 To understand the events in question , it is also necessary to consider in whose hands political power was concentrated .
11 Since ‘ real world ’ applications require the lexicon to contain entries for tens of thousands of words it is also necessary to consider how large the available lexicon is , the format of the entries and how much effort would be required to create new entries .
12 However , it is also necessary to consider the overall purpose of the terms as a whole .
13 Of course , this is a very simple case , and it is often necessary to consider many more AOs and MOs .
14 It is therefore necessary to consider other methods of analysing spontaneous speech samples .
15 It is therefore necessary to consider on a cross-national basis for industrialised market ( or mixed ) economies the genesis and evolution of employers ' associations , external to the firm or enterprise , which have typified collective bargaining arrangements with unions in most Western European countries .
16 Once it is determined that a particular exclusion clause is not invalidated under fiduciary law , it is then necessary to consider whether it is affected by the common law and statutory restrictions on exclusion clauses generally .
17 Having established the point that it is the patient who ultimately may set the limits to the doctor 's intervention , it is now necessary to consider the duties which arise in the usual circumstances in which treatment is consented to .
18 It is now necessary to consider in more detail the character of the apparent singularities in these initial regions II and III .
19 It is now necessary to consider how far down the social scale these party tensions permeated .
20 It is now necessary to consider when a commercial transaction is so structured that it can not be said that the parties are dealing on standard terms at all .
21 Thus , for a specified sub-domain it is only necessary to consider and assemble those primitives that intersect with that space .
22 A general description of the two Leicester pavements is given in appendix E , section 1.2 , p. 127 : here it is only necessary to consider more specific detail .
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