Example sentences of "that [art] [noun] give [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Here , in the shelter that the glen gave from the Atlantic gales , the trees crowded close , and reasonably tall .
2 The hon. Member for Keighley ( Mr. Waller ) referred to the length of time and the detailed scrutiny that the Committee gave to the Bill .
3 a warranty by the auctioneer that the possession given to the purchaser will be undisturbed by the vendor or by himself ,
4 The extent of the warranty of title implied at common law is that the possession given to the purchaser will be undisturbed by the vendor or auctioneer and that the latter knows no defect in the vendor 's title ( see Chapter 7 ) .
5 What you must recognize is that the answers given to the questions will affect the outcome of the research .
6 Posing as a libber , one of our reporters attended a secret meeting of a pro-abortion group and heard its leader , journalist Miss Dorothy Lenham , warn the ‘ sisters — that the funding given to the campaign by the prestigious international research foundation PopCon , might well have sinister implications .
7 With the average age of the population increasing every year , you can appreciate that the assistance given by the D.G.A.A. to improve the quality of life is very much in tune with today 's needs .
8 Their case was strengthened by the fact that the support given by the Eisenhower administration to the militant anti-communists had succeeded only in intensifying the faction fighting in Laos .
9 ‘ In the judgment of this court , when a witness is shown to have made previous statements inconsistent with the evidence given by that witness at the trial , the jury should not merely be directed that the evidence given at the trial should be regarded as unreliable ; they should also be directed that the previous statements , whether sworn or unsworn , do not constitute evidence upon which they can act .
10 The cynic may perhaps be forgiven for commenting that the freedom given by the Use Classes Order and the GDO is so hedged by restrictions , and frequently so difficult to comprehend ( though he may note with relief that painting is not subject to control , unless it is ‘ for purpose of advertisement , announcement or direction ’ ) that it would be safer to assume that any operation constitutes development and requires planning permission .
11 By studying the gospel references to the apocalyptic Jewish figure of the ‘ Son of Man ’ — whom Jesus sometimes appears to identify with himself , but sometimes not — Wrede had come to the conclusions that Jesus had not in fact applied the title to himself ; that after his resurrection the church had come to anticipate his return ; that it had then identified Jesus himself as the coming Son of Man ; and that the impression given in the gospels of a ‘ messianic secret ’ that Jesus in his lifetime conveyed only to his closest disciples , and charged them not to reveal to others until the proper time came , was a mere literary device to support that identification .
12 She was not heeded and later she argued that the party provided an extraordinary , unparalleled forum for kings and communists , dictators and democrats and that the attention given around the world to Iranian history and culture was invaluable .
13 At least that was the diagnosis that the MO gave in the listless heat of the monsoon .
14 Our second assumption was that the information given to the patients was digested and understood .
15 The first thing to stress is that the information given in the orders of battle has been collated entirely from unclassified published sources .
16 The report must also state whether the auditors consider that the information given in the director 's report is consistent with that in the annual accounts and , if they are not satisfied , they must say so in the report .
17 or your solicitor to confirm that the information given in the claim form is correct . )
18 It is important that the information given by the system is relevant to the particular recipient and therefore in the correct level of detail .
19 For example , in In re Tucker ( R. C. ) ( A Bankrupt ) , Ex parte Tucker ( K. R. ) [ 1990 ] Ch. 148 , where the application of the Ex parte Blain , 12 Ch.D. 522 principle was urged , this court declined to construe the words ‘ any person ’ in section 25 of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 as embracing British subjects wherever they might be , and held that the power given to the court by that section to summon persons before it was even more limited and extended only to persons who were available to be served in England .
20 During the rituals for initiation into each successive age-set the ‘ true ’ meanings of certain sacred objects are revealed and it transpires that the interpretations given at the previous stage were false or partial .
21 In determining what constitutes a reasonable prospect it is to be assumed that the prospect given by the facts and other matters known to the creditor at the time he entered into the transaction resulting in the debt was a reasonable prospect ( s 271(4) ) .
22 Yet another complicating factor is that the account given of the generic team 's work with elderly clients is bound to be only a partial exemplification of whatever advantages may be claimed for the generic model , whether of professional practice or of staff development .
23 Tally , of Tally 's Corner , is another key informant , and Liebow ( 1967 ) acknowledges that this may mean that the account given in the book is more that of Tally himself than of others who lived around the street corner .
24 said that the advice given by the judiciary :
25 It may also be noted that the solutions given in the notation of previous sections by ( 10.69 ) where c 1 and c 2 are given by ( 10.67 ) , similarly do not contain curvature singularities on the hypersurface provided the constants d i and a are constrained by ( 10.66 ) and ( 10.68 ) .
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