Example sentences of "part of the [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This is then incorporated and becomes an indistinguishable part of the sewage stream .
2 That old bugger Grunte had not included him in the invitation to dine at some poncy joint called La Noblesse , the smartest part of the Hospitality Inn .
3 Eighteen acres of meadowland , part of the Somerset Levels , is at stake .
4 The LM curve shifts to the right , as shown , but the intersection of the horizontal part of the LM curve with the IS curve is unchanged .
5 Indeed , almost the most valuable part of the coelacanth anatomy , to the Comoreans , is its rough heavy scales .
6 These factors , together with others they identified , were part of the industrialization process and , they concluded , explained the similarities in rates of vertical social mobility .
7 They died when part of the Sun Valley processing plant in Hereford collapsed as 120 men from 3 brigades fought to control the fire .
8 Leading Fire Fighter John Davis died when part of the Sun Valley Poultry factory in Hereford collapsed on him and a colleague .
9 Part of the Sun Valley Poultry factory at Hereford is being pulled down so that replacement buildings can be put up .
10 Madison 's , which is part of the hotel Loutrouvia , has a bar and satellite video playing music during the day and at night .
11 The original house of Quinta Magnolia has recently been restored and is now Part of the Hotel School .
12 The Special Air Service Regiment — or S.A.S. , as it soon came to be called — was at this time an established part of the Army Air Corps , though it was little known to the public at large .
13 Under this Mrs Thatcher and Dr FitzGerald agreed that Northern Ireland would remain a part of the United Kingdom according to the wishes of its majority , but that ministers from Britain and the Republic would meet regularly to review political and security aspects .
14 By accepting the jurisdiction of an external authority in domestic matters , the UK in effect converted her responsibility for the external relations of the Isle of Man into a total responsibility for its internal affairs , and abrogated by a sidewind the semi-independence of the Islands , which are under the Crown but not part of the United Kingdom .
15 The one thing the government wo n't even try is to treat the Province as an integral part of the United Kingdom .
16 We believe strongly that we should go on working together in full partnership in a Union that has served every part of the United Kingdom well .
17 We have upheld our pledge that Northern Ireland will remain an integral part of the United Kingdom in accordance with the democratically expressed wishes of the majority of the people who live there .
18 In 1829 in Cork ( it must be remembered that Ireland was still part of the United Kingdom then ) a sergeant in the 21st Fusiliers was charged with the brutal assault and rape of a deaf girl without speech , Mary Brien , who was uneducated .
19 Should it be desired to alter this state of affairs , there would be many who would assert that the change could not be made without the consent of the part of the United Kingdom affected , however it were to be expressed .
20 Many people do not realise that the ancient bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey are not actually part of the United Kingdom , though they have chosen to be part of its air traffic control and aviation legislation systems .
21 They gave even better against the paramilitary organisations and political groupings of the majority British population which is as instinctively law-abiding as that of any other part of the United Kingdom and probably even quicker to disassociate itself from senseless or politically motivated violence .
22 The Shetland Islands , the most northerly part of the United Kingdom at sixty degrees north , lie well south the true Arctic , but still far enough north that in midsummer the sun only sets for an hour or two .
23 The Isle of Man in the Irish Sea and the Channel Islands between Great Britain and France are largely self-governing ; they are not part of the United Kingdom .
24 By 1970 proposals for reorganising the structure of local government had been suggested for every part of the United Kingdom ; but only in London had the changes been introduced .
25 If service is to be effected in another part of the United Kingdom , the Isle of Man , the Channel Islands , the Republic of Ireland , a colony , or an independent Commonwealth country , official assistance is not available and service must be effected by the plaintiff or his agent ;
26 Under section 25 of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 , the High Court has power to grant interim relief where proceedings have been or are to be commenced in another Contracting State to the Brussels Convention or in another part of the United Kingdom , or where there are or will be any other proceedings within the scope of the 1968 Convention even if that Convention does not directly apply .
27 proceedings have been or are to be commenced in a Contracting State other than the United Kingdom or in a part of the United Kingdom other than that in which the High Court in question exercises jurisdiction ; and
28 This obviously requires the attendance of the witnesses at the trial , and a subpoena may be issued to compel the attendance of those who are within the jurisdiction or in some other part of the United Kingdom .
29 The Act gives certain powers to the High Court where an application is made for an order for evidence to be obtained in England , and the court is satisfied that the application is made in pursuance of a request issued by or on behalf of a court or tribunal exercising jurisdiction in another part of the United Kingdom or some other country , and that the evidence sought is to be obtained for the purposes of civil proceedings which have either been instituted before the requesting court or whose institution is contemplated .
30 This last provision , part of the United Kingdom 's ‘ blocking statute ’ , builds upon the opinions in the House of Lords in the Westinghouse case , where the Attorney-General intervened to express the policy of the Government against the recognition of investigatory orders made in the United States against United Kingdom companies .
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