Example sentences of "[noun] to be paid [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The deal also included provisions for royalties to be paid on box-office takings and a guarantee that the film would not be released before the stage show dosed or 20 June 1971 , whichever was the earlier .
2 The community charge will entail massive increases in the bills to be paid by inner city residents or a substantial reduction in services .
3 The cash to be paid to accepting shareholders will be provided by the bidder 's shareholders and the underwriters according to the purchases they make .
4 This finding confirms the need for considerable attention to be paid to general public education , to the various existing advice agencies and to such people as counter clerks , court officials , doctors and others in official agencies .
5 After the verdicts , Judge Richard Hawkins refused an application for Layton 's costs to be paid from public funds saying the defendant had brought suspicion upon himself .
6 Farmers to be paid for preserving wetlands
7 But , the price to be paid for estuarial development could be less acceptable .
8 THE price to be paid for petty crime in Ulster can be a high one — kneecappings and beatings by terrorists for ‘ anti-social behaviour ’ are common place .
9 The fate of Poland demonstrated the price to be paid for oligarchic fracturing of state power ; the Pugachev rebellion ( see below , pp. 61–2 ) ( 1773–74 ) demonstrated all too brutally the need to buttress the Tsar 's authority .
10 The simplest method of valuing the business is to agree a fixed price to be paid in full by the purchaser in cash on completion .
11 Naturally the vendor will want the price to be paid in full on completion .
12 Example 4:7 Side by side rent sharing SCHEDULE ( 1 ) In this schedule : ( a ) " rental income " means the aggregate of : ( i ) any yearly or other periodical sums payable under an occupational lease including sums payable by virtue of any enactment ; ( ii ) any sums payable by way of interest under an occupational lease ; ( iii ) any sums payable by way of damages or compensation for any breach of a tenant 's obligation under an occupational lease ; ( iv ) any sum payable by a guarantor of a tenant 's obligation under an occupational lease pursuant to his guarantee ; ( v ) any premium paid or other capital payment made by a tenant under an occupational lease in connection with the grant assignment variation or surrender of an occupational lease ; ( vi ) any sum payable under a policy of insurance in respect of loss of rent or other income ( b ) " permitted deductions " means the aggregate of : ( i ) expenses reasonably incurred by the tenant in order to comply with its obligations as landlord under an occupational lease ; ( ii ) legal costs incurred by the tenant in enforcing obligations under occupational leases except to the extent that the tenant recovers those costs from a party to an occupational lease ; ( iii ) the amount of any compensation or damages which the tenant is liable by statute or ordered to pay to any party to an occupational lease whether for non-renewal of a tenancy breach of covenant breach of obligation compensation for improvements or otherwise ; ( iv ) the cost of management and rent collection not exceeding … per cent of rental income ( c ) " notional rental income " means the rack rental value of any lettable unit which is either unlet or vacant or occupied by the tenant or by a group company the value to be determined as at the date on which the unit in question ceased to be let or occupied or as the case may be become occupied by the tenant or a group company and redetermined every year ( d ) " lettable unit " means a part of the property which is designed constructed or adapted for letting to an occupying retail trader ( e ) " occupational lease " means a lease under which physical possession of a lettable unit was granted by the tenant ( f ) " rack rental value " of any lettable unit at any time means the rent at which that unit might reasonably be expected to be let in the open market for a term of not less than ten years with an upwards only rent review on every fifth anniversary of the beginning of the term and on such other terms as would be expected to be negotiated in the open market ( including such financial inducements and concessions as are usual in the market at that time ) ( g ) " group company " means a company which would be treated as a member of the same group of companies as the tenant for the purposes of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 ( h ) " divisible income " means the difference between : ( i ) rental income plus notional rental income ; and ( ii ) permitted deductions but divisible income shall never be less than nil ( i ) " the first slice " means such part of divisible income as does not exceed £ ( j ) " the second slice " means such part of divisible income as exceeds £ but does not exceed £ ( k ) " the top slice " means such part of divisible income as exceeds £ ( 2 ) The rent payable by the tenant is the aggregate of : ( a ) … per cent of the first slice ; ( b ) … per cent of the second slice ; and ( c ) … per cent of the top slice to be paid by equal quarterly payments on the usual quarter days
13 The OR then calls a meeting of creditors to decide whether they will make the debtor bankrupt or let him off by accepting an arrangement for less than 100 per cent of their debts to be paid in full and final settlement .
14 Jonathan Price , the Welsh union 's commercial executive , said : ‘ New regulations on amateurism allow players to be paid for promotional work .
15 Mr Trench said inadequate legislation allowed ‘ the financial burglar ’ to steal the security of 20,000 pensioners and the Government should now underwrite pensions to be paid in full .
16 A portion of that inscription serves us well today and it reads and I quote all who shall hereafter live in freedom will be here reminded that to these men and their comrades we owe a debt to be paid with grateful remembrance of their sacrifice and with a high resolve that the cause for which they died will live eternally .
17 We do owe a debt to be paid with grateful remembrance of the sacrifices you and your comrades made .
18 The company had to give up the surplus stock it had accumulated at the expense of the public creditors and rescind its claims to be paid in full for the amount it had sold , but the real victims were the public creditors , who had to reconcile themselves to drastic losses in income and capital .
19 A provision , exceptionally , for interest to be paid on undrawn profits ( Clause 10.05 ) .
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