Example sentences of "[noun sg] to be taken " in BNC.

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1 The purpose of this get-together was to enable a group photograph to be taken in front of the Society 's latest restoration project , Spitfire PR.XI PL965/G-MKXI .
2 The head waiter made a servile fuss when they arrived and begged permission for a photograph to be taken for publicity purposes .
3 They concluded that the goals for the new programme were ambitious , maybe too ambitious , but that this was a programme to be taken every bit as seriously as its predecessor .
4 D ) At 4.00 pm ( 3.00 pm — Friday ) all outgoing mail to be taken down to mailroom .
5 Its body fell with a loud splash to be taken by the river .
6 A party meeting was to be held on the following Monday and the Whips were making preparation for a vote to be taken .
7 Erm well the solution to that was to hold the meetings of the General Assembly , where the hostile American majority was , but not to permit a vote to be taken on any resolution and this meant that President Johnson could pursue his , his then secret plan of bombing the north without any hostile United Nations resolution being passed against it .
8 Erm well the solution to that was to hold the meetings of the General Assembly , where the hostile American majority was , but not to permit a vote to be taken on any resolution and this meant that President Johnson could pursue his , his then secret plan of bombing the north without any hostile United Nations resolution being passed against it .
9 Presented to the Society by Mr J E Cadwallader from Capetown , South Africa - the last employee to be taken on by the Bishop 's Castle Railway . )
10 When the angina patient seemed to be stable he too was transported to an ambulance to be taken to hospital so that he could rest and fully recover from his attack .
11 He called the RAC once more and arranged for the car to be taken to the edge of Brighton .
12 a ‘ statistically average ’ person aged 16 or over can expect : a robbery once every five centuries ( not attempts ) , an assault resulting in injury ( even if slight ) once every century , the family car to be taken by joyriders once every 60 years , a burglary in the home once every 40 years .
13 Radelescu and Stoia ( 1979 ) , for instance , describe a microprocessor-based closed-loop control in which the switching angle is calculated by an algorithm involving the two previous step periods , enabling the rate of change of speed to be taken into account .
14 Contained in the DNA are ‘ library rules ’ dictating what has to be done for the instructions for a particular protein to be taken out and ‘ read ’ .
15 However , despite the absence of a single world-wide consensus on religious observance , once the child is born there will be , for the majority of parents , a decision on religious ritual to be taken .
16 In a case where the driver 's option is to be explained to him under section 8(2) , the driver should be told that if he exercises the right to have a replacement specimen taken under section 7(4) , it will be for the constable to decide whether that specimen is to be of blood or urine and , if the constable intends to require a specimen of blood to be taken by a medical practitioner , the driver should be told that his only right to object to giving blood and to give urine instead will be for medical reasons to be determined by the medical practitioner .
17 ‘ It would be foolish and dangerous for no action to be taken to combat air pollution , ’ said their Lordships , advocating that Britain should reduce sulphur dioxide emissions by 30 per cent .
18 This review process should result in an agreement of action to be taken at the next meeting to consolidate and celebrate strengths and to overcome weaknesses .
19 They can give early warning of stability problems and enable the corrective action to be taken at an early stage and thus save time and development resource .
20 Individual elements of house building are discussed with their likely defects , and finally a detailed description of the sequence and method of survey is given , and the action to be taken afterwards .
21 Any instructions to counsel and any opinion of counsel ( whether or not in connection with any proceedings ) and any advice received , information obtained or action to be taken in connection with —
22 Although rare , medication errors can occur in hospitals too , and there is usually a hospital policy about the action to be taken in such circumstances .
23 Where a local authority proposes to take action under s.92(1) ( d ) or ( c ) and it would be possible for action to be taken under the above 1906 Act , consent must first be obtained from the Secretary of State for the Environment .
24 However in view of the emphasis on prevention rather than punishment , the most likely form of action to be taken by the Factory Inspectorate is the service of an improvement notice to the factory occupier requiring certain measures to be taken , within a specified time , to achieve compliance with the Act 's provisions .
25 The final stage is to communicate the findings of the audit to the procedure owner , to allow decisions to be made about the action to be taken .
26 Controls must be sufficiently near to the event to enable adjustment or avoiding action to be taken .
27 action to be taken if profits fall short of ( or exceed ) planned levels .
28 This gives an opportunity for action to be taken at once and for things to be put right without delay .
29 She tried to mask her true feelings from her mother and sister , but her throat ached with tension and she felt desperate for some action to be taken , to try to search for him .
30 FRAG is currently drafting guidance for members on the recognition of suspicious transactions and the action to be taken in relation to them , which , it argues , should provide sufficient regulation .
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