Example sentences of "recognised as [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Though some of those applications came from people who would be generally recognised as refugees , many — between half and two-thirds , according to some observers — are fleeing poverty not persecution .
2 of claimants were recognised as refugees .
3 Charles VII , excluded from the succession by the treaty , was , however , recognised as king in the south of France and the bitter struggles for sovereignty continued .
4 The one case where another string was allowable is where the intended word are was recognised as ore .
5 Positive cells were recognised as lamina propria macrophages , as they expressed the pan macrophage marker CD68 , as observed in parallel sections stained with the monoclonal antibody KP1 .
6 Peterlee-based TRW REPA has become the first company in County Durham to be recognised as Investors in People , a training benchmark , by the County Durham Training and Enterprise Council .
7 But it seems safe to say that there are circumstances in which litost and glasnost can be recognised as enemies , and that this enmity can be recognised in the novel Life is elsewhere .
8 Five years on from The Life And Loves Of A She-Devil , Julie is still recognised as Ruth , the dowdy , downtrodden housewife who adopted a wide range of disguises and underwent major plastic surgery to wreak revenge on her unfaithful husband , played by Dennis Waterman .
9 It would forfeit , by the same token , any claim to be recognised as law .
10 However , it is now clear that many legal matters never emerge even for legal assistance , let alone litigation , because they are never identified as legal problems by the sufferers , or never reach lawyers , or , having reached lawyers , are not recognised as problems within the purview of the law .
11 Vitamin A deficiency and xerophthalmia are recognised as problems locally ; words exist for night blindness in all the local languages and cases of xerophthalmia are reported by local ophthalmological services .
12 THIS WILL BE REFLECTED IN A CONSISTENTLY OUTSTANDING FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE AND GUINNESS BREWING WORLDWIDE WILL BE RECOGNISED AS A TRULY EXCEPTIONAL COMPANY IN WHICH ALL WHO WORK FOR THE COMPANY CAN TAKE PRIDE .
13 any provisions or prepayments in the balance sheet resulting from a difference between the amounts recognised as cost and the amounts funded or paid directly
14 Like China 's famous panda , the baiji is a fully protected species , recognised as part of China 's natural heritage , and the Chinese government has taken several steps to improve the prospects for the animal 's continued survival into the twenty-first century .
15 Credit transfer , or ‘ exemption ’ as it is sometimes called , has long been recognised as part of SCOTVEC 's provision .
16 To advertise their unpalatability they don bright red and orange colours , which are recognised as warning signals by many predators .
17 If tourism is to be properly recognised as Scotland 's largest employer , and recognised for the very considerable revenue that it brings into the country , it must first be given higher priority within the Scottish Office itself .
18 These courses are recognised as preparation for professional registration and students can choose either general nursing or mental health nursing .
19 When they are , ( probably not before April 1992 ) Age Concern Groups will almost certainly come under the network exemption , provided that they are recognised as groups by Age Concern England , or by the relevant major group .
20 Bowe won the undisputed title on points from Holyfield in November but is only recognised as champion by the IBF and WBA .
21 He was also recognised as Overlord of Wales in 893 , and as such , ruled until his death in October 899 .
22 Like other powerful English rulers , he may also have been recognised as overlord by the Welsh and Scots , and possibly some of the Irish .
23 In fact , even as he spoke , the forces for change were there and rallying : the critique of the established constitutional authorities was eating into things below the froth of party politics ; the Liberal-SDP Alliance considered that the " key to … change lies in electoral and constitutional reform " ; and Tony Benn , generally recognised as leader of the radical left in the Labour Party , was telling large and enthusiastic audiences up and down the country that " constitutional questions are the key to power in a parliamentary democracy " and that " socialists need to give at least as much attention to the institutions of the state as to the power structure of the economy " .
24 They wanted them to be recognised as concert orchestra instruments , and disapproved highly of their Tri-Plates occasionally getting into the hands of rough-and-ready blues musicians .
25 The name of Heryng is found in and around Halling ; in 1346 Richard de Hales of Cobham , proved his legitimacy and that his father was married to Agnes Heryng of Halling in Halling Church more than forty years before and had lived as man and wife for more than twenty five years and that Richard was the said child was born and recognised as son and heir .
26 The Encomiast 's tale that he was born to another woman and smuggled into Ælfgifu of Northampton 's bed at least implies that he was generally recognised as son of Cnut and Ælfgifu , and Adam calls Gorm the Old Hardecnudth Vurm , which if correct makes it feasible to believe that Cnut named Swegen and Harold from his father and grandfather , and Harthacnut , evidently the third-born , after his great-grandfather .
27 None of these clinical symptoms , which have been recognised as symptoms of primary HIV infection , differed between drug users who seroconverted and those who were negative for HIV .
28 In the early 1980s , such churches were not yet recognised as vehicles for providing housing and this ignorance of the potential of All Saints and St Barnabas generated a low purchase price which was a vital element in making the financing of this publicly funded scheme work within accepted limits .
29 IV C1 — Infections recognised as AIDS
30 IV C2 — Infections not recognised as AIDS , e.g. thrush of the mouth , TB of the lungs and oral leukoplakia
  Next page