Example sentences of "has rely on [art] " in BNC.
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1 | The company will also be estopped if the transferee has relied on a false statement in his transferor 's certificate that the transferor was the registered holder of the shares on the date stated in the certificate . |
2 | This is likely to distress the movie industry which has relied on the NTSC/PAL standards barrier to police its copyright deals with different countries . |
3 | It has relied on the basic techniques of literature searching , interviews with individuals and organisations and an examination of key industry forecasts , reviews and analysis . |
4 | During negotiations , Newco should try to avoid any general qualification that the warranties are given to the best of the vendors ' knowledge , as this could be interpreted to the effect that a vendor giving a warranty subject to this qualification has relied on the information given to him by management , and again distances the vendor from the risk . |
5 | Since the discourse analyst , like the hearer , has no direct access to a speaker 's intended meaning in producing an utterance , he often has to rely on a process of inference to arrive at an interpretation for utterances or for the connections between utterances . |
6 | Rebecca 's body has already rejected two kidneys , and she has to rely on a daily cocktail of drugs |
7 | Given this limitation therefore , one has to rely on an interpretation of the relationships between the mosaics themselves . |
8 | Here one has to rely on the indices produced by survey techniques , which do not provide ambiguous definitions and which are open to a variety of interpretations but which nonetheless do provide a starting point for analysis . |
9 | The Crown ought of course to offer the statement to the defence if the statement is materially at variance with the maker 's evidence in court , but in this regard the trial judge has to rely on the Crown 's discretion and propriety . |
10 | The public has to rely on the media but some presentations seem to be made more for dramatic effect than to provide unbiased information . |