Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb -s] the [noun] [vb pp] " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 They are to the effect that a refusal is reasonable if : ( i ) it is based upon the personality of the proposed assignee or upon the proposed use or occupation of the premises ; or ( ii ) it is based on the contract between lessor and lessee and it safeguards the interests granted or reserved to the lessor by the lease ; or ( iii ) it is reasonable in a general sense , taking into account the surrounding circumstances , the commercial realities of the market-place and the economic impact of an assignment on the landlord .
32 Textermination is not directly concerned with technology ; rather it elaborates the issues raised by the current place of the novel in our technological society .
33 It pursues the hostilities begun in the series 25 years ago and much of the old formula : attempted allegory to political developments on this planet ; loud space effects .
34 It confirms the view taken by Professor Hoggett ( Mental Health Law ( 3rd ed. ) at p.118 ) .
35 Whatever their private opinions , the liberals were willing to establish catholicism as the sole religion of Spain , to make heresy a crime , to allow episcopal censorship of religious works ; as Larra was to observe , it was a one-legged freedom that permitted only ‘ political ’ discussion and it shows the limitations imposed on liberalism by fear of the Church .
36 The confusing thing about X is that it reverses the nomenclature used in microcomputer networks .
37 Thinking cinematically — there is , he believes , a whole philosophic category of filmic vision — he sees the moment played in close-up : the camera moving slowly up her beautiful legs , brown and restive , reaching this little mysterious delta just as the short , dense skirt descends .
38 Moreover , as Herman explains , the boundaries between control and constraint are overlapping , since ‘ [ a ] constraint is a form of control even if only negative in exercise , as it shapes the decisions made by limiting the scope of choice .
39 do n't mind being unpopular if it gets the job done
40 He cites the example shown by Viscount Montgomery in World War N. Laing , who fought under the famous military leader , recalls that the troops always had great confidence in him because he was very visible .
41 It states the peerage conferred ( whether it be a barony , a viscountcy , etc. ) and prescribes the mode in which it is to descend to heirs .
42 He gets the audit done to help his team and they know it , welcoming it .
43 Yeah , but what he means by six is , he gets the jobs done quicker
44 He does n't come cheap , but he gets the job done .
45 Whichever way the argument is presented , however , it violates the priority accorded to private autonomy by liberalism .
46 For years he keeps the kid hidden away like the greatest secret in the galaxy , and now he 's showing him off for everybody to see .
47 My main difficulty is that it reduces the principle enunciated by this House in the Hoffmann-La Roche case to the status of an arbitrary rule — what Dillon L.J .
48 Although written from a French perspective , the essence of the Charter is relevant for all cultures and it reflects the values promoted by WACC through its worldwide programme of media awareness seminars and workshops .
49 In The Fire of Love he pinpoints the experience witnessed to by all mystics of a strenuous inner effort which although it is the precondition of contemplative experience can not actually produce it .
50 A spokesman for Elton said : ‘ It seems the car collided with a bollard that was out of position on the road . ’
51 It excludes the contributions made by individuals who finance the sending of telexes and telegrams as well as the funds required to support national sections .
52 In this way it combines the legitimacy conferred by long inheritance with the lustre and potency of some of the most prestigious diamonds recovered by man .
53 From Kuhn 's particular point of view , this is mistaken because it ignores the role played by paradigms in guiding observation and experiment .
54 THE Court of Appeal has the power to increase Dr Courtney 's seven-year sentence if it feels the term imposed at the Old Bailey is ‘ unduly lenient ’ .
55 In doing so , it follows the pattern set by Guardian Royal Exchange ( see ACCOUNTANCY , October , p 17 ) and Guinness ( see ACCOUNTANCY , November , p 49 ) which both incorporated reviews by auditors Price Waterhouse in their interim reports .
56 A day to remember for 13-year-old Julian Stewart as he enjoys the ride flanked by Phil Kearns ( left ) and David Campese .
57 Husameddin goes on to make clear that he means the revolts associated with Shaykh Badr al-Din Mahmud b .
58 A petitioner wishing to withdraw his petition or for it to be dismissed must apply to the court and file an affidavit in support of his application specifying the reasons why he wishes the petition withdrawn or dismissed ( r 6.32(1) ) .
59 The job occupies him , as Svidrigailov would say ; it involves both the man and the salaried magistrate , and it defines the part played by Porfiry in the apocalyptic naturalism of the crime-and-punishment process .
60 He rejects the criteria favoured by Thompson not , of course , out of mere dogmatism , but rather because he believes that the self-consciousness of a class is not a crucial factor in explaining its birth and development .
  Previous page   Next page