Example sentences of "[adj] implications [prep] [adj] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The social implications of changing patterns of work and employment in Macclesfield
2 The social implications of differing levels of car availability are very important .
3 We examined the aerodynamic implications of different types of tail elongation by modelling progressive elaboration from a short , simple tail in which all feathers are of equal length ( see Fig. 1 ) .
4 Public debt as a proportion of GDP is already rising steeply ; and if this is allowed to go unchecked , Britain would quickly change from being a low debt to a high debt country with a burden of interest payments which would have serious implications for future levels of taxation .
5 Public debt as a proportion of GDP is already rising steeply ; and if this is allowed to go unchecked , Britain would quickly change from being a low debt to a high debt country with a burden of interest payments which would have serious implications for future levels of taxation .
6 Attention has been drawn above to the economic implications of similar problems in relation to education and foreign policy , though in both cases the civil service is a closely involved party .
7 This major social trend has widespread implications in different kinds of geography , not least in connection with elections .
8 In due course , when all available information on the releases of polonium-210 and other nuclides not so far incorporated in the analysis has been assimilated , the board will publish a revised assessment of the radiological implications of environmental releases from the Windscale fire .
9 to enable certain other worthy contenders , eg. Braehead West , a chance to proceed , for WLDC to deny development of one site for infrastructure reasons while overtly supporting development elsewhere with equal implications for excessive demands on schools .
10 This apparently low level of active parental involvement has important implications for other aspects of current policy — especially the arrangements for schools to opt out of local authority control .
11 This has important implications for current trends in thinking about the role of the family ( and the extended family ) in the occupational system of advanced societies and for certain feminist approaches to the issues of women in the labour market which tend to operate from an essentially middle class paradigm of the individualized career and salary and the consequent marginalization of women in the domestic context .
12 This has profound implications for other parts of Labour 's organisation , which is why leaders from Hugh Gaitskell to Neil Kinnock have postponed the change .
13 There is a concern to increase the independence of members and to devise institutional relationships to facilitate a balance of powers that would give the Commons a more effective checking , choosing , and legislating role of the kind it enjoyed prior to the extension of the franchise and the organising implications of political parties in the nineteenth century .
14 Either schools will have to lend the bulk of their support to the organization and teaching forms which are associated with more traditional forms of assessment , or they will have to recognize the full implications of new forms of recording achievement and adjust their procedures accordingly .
15 The section will therefore draw out some general implications for industrial relations of the dynamic of political control and managerial autonomy within the context of growing fiscal crisis .
16 The research seeks to quantify these changes at the local scale and assess their significance for population redistribution rates in order to gauge better the geographical implications of anticipated trends in population structure .
17 This is , after all , the most spectacular and controversial example of the radical implications of rational expectations in macroeconomics .
18 This should be used to indicate the financial implications of special features within the development plan .
19 The project will provide an assessment of a particular ‘ right ’ which has significant implications for other rights to the use and enjoyment of the countryside .
20 take better policy decisions by assisting them to work out the implications of their basic strategy in terms of policies in specific areas , to establish the relative priorities to be given to the different sectors of their programme as a whole , to identify those areas of policy in which new choices can be exercised and to ensure that the underlying implications of alternative courses of action are fully analysed and considered .
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