Example sentences of "and the [noun pl] [prep] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 And Grainne , who had her own might-have-beens , understood , and tried to make her stories of the Bright Palace interesting and amusing , and tried to minimise the rigours and the heartaches of exile on Innisfree .
2 It is a fact that whatever actions are being taken at any one time , the individuals concerned are rarely , if ever , aware of the effect they may be having on events and the conditions of life in the remote future .
3 But this merely confirms yet again that the idea of numerical diversity of ontological existents is inseparable from the idea of an objective order , and consequently that a clarification of the former idea depends upon a clarification of the sources and the conditions of intelligibility of such an order .
4 To ask the Secretary of State for Education and Science if he will make a statement on the staffing levels and the conditions of schools in Greater Manchester .
5 Some successful applications have been in studies of the spreading behaviour of oxides such as MoO 3 on Al 2 O 3 ) , the formation of monolayers by solid-solid wetting ( such as the spreading of MoO 3 , WO 3 , and V 2 O 5 on an Al 2 O 3 support ) , and the conditions for formation of surface polymolybdate , which is considered to be a precursor state for the active catalyst .
6 It will show the major application systems of the organisation and the flows of resources between them .
7 Key areas of the Act are the underlying principles of partnership , the provisions relating to children ‘ in need ’ , the consideration of racial and cultural background , and the duties in relation to homeless young people .
8 The department monitors the inmate population , offences against prison rules and the penalties awarded ; it assists management in determining security grades and in assessments on life sentence prisoners ; and it has been looking at the structures of meetings , the effectiveness of communications and the problems of stress in staff .
9 This , combined with the effects of the recession on training demands and budgets , and the problems of placement of trainees with employers and into jobs , leaves us with an almost unsolvable problem without further funds . ’
10 Encopresis and the problems of constipation with overflow soiling often cause great concern to parents and the management of these difficulties are also described .
11 The aim of this study is to discover the relationship between the availability of transport , and the problems of deprivation in inner cities and in other urban areas with economic and social problems .
12 There was a problem during the er evidence to the various committees that were looking at the coal crisis and the problems in relation to coal , in that very often people were translating it into tonnage and the number of pits etcetera , whereas the argument needed to be that the rules of the game had been rigged in the first place at the privatization of electricity and the rules of the game need to be changed if we 're gon na succeed .
13 More down to earth are essays on predicting the economy by Frank Hahn and the frontiers of medicine by Ian Kennedy .
14 For many thousands of children experiencing actual separation and the consequences of divorce of their parents , it is likely to be a continuous process of change and adjustment and of considerable anxiety as their parents try to resolve the different stages identified above .
15 For an advance disclosure in a customer agreement to suffice it would probably , particularly in the case of an inexperienced customer , have to explain the circumstances in which the firm might receive and withhold information , for example , because it is behind a Chinese wall , the fact that the information will be price-sensitive and the consequences of non-disclosure for A. It would be difficult to draft a general clause predicting in advance all the possible eventualities , and whatever type of clause is used , further disclosure might be necessary as particular conflicts come to light .
16 A third group are the colonialists and the neo-colonialists with experience of colonial societies .
17 No case bearing a strong analogy to the present was cited ; but the importance of enforcing promises which have been made to induce parties to marry has been often recognised , and the cases of Montefiori v. Montefiori ( ( 1762 ) 1 W.Bl. 363 ) and Bold v. Hutchinson ( ( 1855 ) 20 Beavan 250 ) are examples .
18 When Geoffrey le Bel was unable to arbitrate in person between the seneschal and the monks of Baugé in a quarrel over tithes in 1146 , he insisted that his part in the case be acknowledged .
19 A wide crock on the table was filled with the flower heads , the seed pods and the leaves of nasturtiums from the garden .
20 The principal documents relevant to the equity transaction are the subscription and shareholders ' agreement and the Articles of Association of Newco .
21 There are plenty of other reasons for wanting to live there , with Carlingford Lough in one direction and the Mountains of Mourne in another : the physical beauty of Ulster is a secret as well-kept as the undemonstrative friendliness of its people .
22 The temple ruins in the foreground , peak sanctuary in the middle distance , and the mountains of Lasithi on the skyline
23 The palace kitchen is huge — if I described it , with its great pots on the fire and the mountains of food on the tables , perhaps you would not believe me .
24 The Court of Appeal concluded that this was a case of deliberate and secret action by the employees and the defendants in circumstances in which they must have known the exact result of what they were doing and must have known it was wrong .
25 Brig Low firmly rejected these claims : I mentioned the Moscow Agreement and the plans for occupation of Austria by the Allies .
26 As he had been invited to dine with Members afterwards , his secretary had booked him into The Howard Hotel , a few hundred yards from Parliament Square on the Victoria Embankment , overlooking the Tower of London to the east and the Houses of Parliament to the west .
27 Indeed , it had been a violent election campaign by post-war standards and the columns of papers like The Times were filled day after day by reports of ‘ Labour rowdyism ’ .
28 This chapter will focus on the English law of rape , its relationship with other sexual offences and the options for reform within the present framework of the law .
29 The ‘ aristocratic ’ character of landowning has been a central basis for social status and political power in Britain for centuries , and the divisions of interest between land and industry have been fundamental to the political development of the upper class .
30 The device also enabled the lord to mitigate the rigour of primogeniture and make provision for younger sons , for daughters , and for the endowment of Masses for his soul and the souls of members of his family .
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