Example sentences of "[noun pl] in [verb] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 We have already seen many of its characteristics in considering approaches to the study of public law .
2 Fastolf 's methods in securing gains are shown by an episode recorded in the archives of the Parlement of Paris .
3 This differs from most earlier kouroi in having arms and hands carved free of the sides , but the sculptor has cautiously supported them by struts from hip to wrist : an extremely rare feature in Greek work but regular in marble copies of the Roman period after Greek bronzes ; and bronze becomes the favourite medium for freestanding sculpture in the period we are entering .
4 In the Sunday Express he said that goal judges ‘ must come ’ to give more help to referees in avoiding errors of judgement .
5 The EC issued a statement on Feb. 7 saying that its member states were " shocked and dismayed at the government of Sudan 's continued failure … to co-operate with donors and non-governmental organizations in implementing measures to ensure that emergency supplies reach the needy populations in time " .
6 The report contains comments from policymakers in borrowing countries , much of it criticizing Bank officials for ignoring local input while implementing policies decided at Bank headquarters .
7 I am extremely grateful for the assistance your staff have provided through CAB offices in assisting individuals in connection with Community Charge and trust that this will continue into the Council Tax era following 1 April 1993 .
8 They have doctorates in education , and pace the halls in jogging suits .
9 At the end of November , NDOs , SCOTVEC Officers and outside consultants will participate in a three day workshop to provide training and develop guidelines in writing competences .
10 Classic styles in mouthwatering colours are the ingredients that make up Great Plains — a new range from French Connection .
11 That process is under way and the processes of political parties in choosing candidates are an important part of our democratic process .
12 It should be appreciated that the law is there to assist BOTH parties in resolving disputes , and the defenders and their insurers should not simply allow the pursuer the initiative .
13 This was followed by the bowling-alley racket of stones and boulders ricocheting off the walls of the crater as they ascended from a great depth to gush out over our heads in billowing clouds of debris and Our equipment , clothes and bodies were penetrated by the finest , hardest black dust .
14 Tactics in drafting agreements and conducting disputes are considered in Chapter 16 : comparisons are made between litigation , arbitration , expert determination and alternative dispute resolution .
15 The Royal Africa Company did no worse than other traders in taking slaves across , but its commercial difficulties with its customers were probably worse than the average .
16 The old elderly — frail , and mainly widows — will also provide growing business opportunities in converting houses to meet their needs and health care .
17 Helen Cam once suggested that parliamentary petitions may have sprung from the already practised art of the clergy in drafting lists of gravamina , or grievances , which at intervals since 1237 they had submitted to the king for redress ; but G. O. Sayles traces the origin more directly to the legal procedure of bills of complaint submitted to the king 's itinerant justices , and certainly the character of the early parliamentary petitions seems to bear this out : clerical gravamina were corporate complaints directed against general practices rather than particular people and they lacked the specific quality which individual parliamentary petitions naturally displayed .
18 crouched over shared books in leaking classrooms ,
19 Others are the use of computers in aiding designers and in controlling production processes .
20 Where enforcement relationships in sanctioning systems tend to be compressed and abrupt , compliance enforcement is marked by an extended , incremental approach .
21 Such a reformulation would not only call for a reassessment of traditional notions and practices — balance , impartiality , objectivity , ownership , editorial sovereignty — but would also require the media to improve upon their present performances in explaining events in the world .
22 Assessing the need for adaptations in presenting materials
23 These derivatives , as they are known , can be very effective in limiting potential losses in falling markets , while producing spectacular gains when they rise .
24 However the chopper drive does have the advantage that the available supply voltage is fully utilised , enabling operation over the widest possible speed range , and the power losses in forcing resistors are eliminated , giving a good system efficiency .
25 The leadership of the NECC is well aware of the contradictions in urging children back into the overcrowded classrooms of a system still based on apartheid principles .
26 This aspect of communication is obviously what written language is supremely good at , whether for the benefit of the individual in remembering the private paraphernalia of daily life , or for the benefit of nations in establishing constitutions , laws and treaties with other nations .
27 The Government feels that the disclosure regulations , which came into force in October 1991 , place too onerous a task on auditing firms and clients in monitoring payments to associates which at the same time are unlikely to impair the independence and integrity of the audit .
28 Advisers interview clients in interviewing rooms but must leave the client in order to check information in the files .
29 Clearly , within particular realms of human experience they may play crucial roles in assisting individuals and groups to achieve their ends .
30 John Ritchie , Staff Development TVEI Co-ordinator , has now followed up the audit by inviting all schools in identify developments that should be undertaken centrally to allow these gaps to be filled .
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