Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] [prep] [noun] where " in BNC.
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1 | SFA 's rules relating to futures follow this tenet by application of the relevant rules only to circumstances where they are required , for example by limiting them to private investors , to contingent liability transactions or to margined transactions . |
2 | Men like Barnet Becow and Jack Spot served gaol sentences for assault and grievous bodily harm respectively in cases where the targets were Mosley 's followers . |
3 | They had met eight months before in Houston where she was on a promotional tour for her Budgie books . |
4 | There was a big announcement a number of months ago in Derry where a political party said on the headlines of the news about creating 200 jobs in Derry . |
5 | If he is interested in what is happening in the European Community , he could do no better than cast his eyes across to France where a socialist Government have just announced that country 's highest-ever unemployment level . |
6 | This difference will not affect care management much in cases where social services teams are the main purchasers — for example , in services for people with learning disabilities . |
7 | The introduction in January ninety three of six European directives has given us a unique opportunity to raise the profile of the G M B both in places where we have membership and elsewhere , when the message gets across how the G M B reps are so well trained and able to represent members on all health and safety issues . |
8 | Holyfield , watching Ruddock gunned down live on the American HBO cable network at his training camp home in Houston where he is preparing for his November 13 defence against Bowe , said : ‘ Sure , Lewis looked good but I 'm not alarmed because I 'm a very cool person . |
9 | Because there must come a point somewhere in time where the shop will say well you 've now had these goods so long they 're no longer our responsibility . |
10 | The first issue , published in 1970 , appeared as an annotated catalogue to the then National Book League 's touring exhibition and as a guide to book buyers away from centres where books were displayed . |
11 | ‘ It 's one of the few places close to Washington where you can get lost and still not get hurt , ’ Ashelman said . |
12 | Two years later to Somerset where I learnt that the great advantage of being an in-house solicitor is that you can help your clients , the social workers , planners , and teachers to get their procedures and attitudes right before cases come to court or committee . |
13 | However , young children 's ability to develop language is extremely robust , and unless there are additional cognitive or emotional problems , children learn the language of their community even under conditions where exposure to adult input seems to be remarkably impoverished . |
14 | Tim and Julie met 11 years ago in Bath where she was training to be a teacher and he was starting out as a trainee accountant . |
15 | We spent a day ashore on Barentsøya where the Dutch party went off inland on their own and met up with a polar bear with two cubs , which ran off when they saw the party . |
16 | The main aim of policy was — as it still is in many poor countries — to take rubbish away from places where it posed a health hazard , and ( to a lesser extent ) to make sure that waste sites were properly run . |
17 | ‘ The trial shows that by careful choice and timing of cultivations and herbicide applications it is possible blackgrass control even in areas where the yield-robbing weed is out of control , ’ explains Ciba-Geigy 's Andy Pigott . |
18 | So far , however , we have restricted the argument unnecessarily to cases where I have in fact made mistakes in the past . |
19 | It is an idea that has taken root recently in Scotland where local government and private enterprise , approaching it from different starting points , have begun to put both the idea and supporting environmental ideals to the test . |
20 | The Commission proposes a system combining the strengths of a liability regime with the advantages of compensation systems , providing a means to repair environmental damage even in cases where liability could not be established . |
21 | Root crops were of great significance only in Speyside where 83% of the farmers considered turnips an important ingredient in winter stock diets . |
22 | Both types of bird nest deep in caves where little or no light penetrates , and both navigate through the blackness using echoes from their own vocal clicks . |
23 | The present UK Conservative government seems eager to remove controls even in cases where many people consider them beneficial , for equally political reasons ; but it has done so far more quickly in some areas than others . |
24 | That would lead to a situation where more assistance passes between women than between men even in situations where their ‘ needs ’ are more similar than in the examples I quoted above . |
25 | As discussed previously , the accident estimates given by subjects are only a crude measure of objective risk which is clearly related to subjective risk even in situations where this is inappropriate ( e.g. multiple estimates of objective risk for the same junction ) . |
26 | They had taken flight on Eadwine 's accession into exile among the Picts and Scots ( HE 111 , 1 ) , Oswald and Oswiu finding refuge in Scottish Dál Riata ( HE 111 , 3 , 25 ) and Eanfrith evidently in Pictland where his son , Talorcan , subsequently reigned as king of the Picts in the mid-650s . |
27 | Davies said he ditched his girlfriend for Fiona and they went on holiday together to Tenerife where Paul took pictures of her topless . |
28 | The result of these rules of practice was that the English set up colonies only in places where it was relatively easy to do so , at first because the places they went to were thinly populated , then because political disintegration in India enabled them to advance there , and because in the last phase of imperial expansion they had the sort of technological superiority needed for bringing most African rulers under their control . |
29 | Quite a small bevel is adequate for this purpose so in cases where a square has to be turned over , such a small bevel on each side is the solution . |
30 | Why functions in almost opposite fashion to how , however , in that whereas the most common use with the latter involves taking for granted the existence of the means ( how to ) , the former is used with the infinitive exclusively in cases where the speaker is questioning the existence of any good reason to perform the event denoted by the infinitive : ( 46 ) Why bother to reply ? |