Example sentences of "for [noun pl] [verb] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ( S. ) 760 ) This anomaly will be removed by Criminal Justice Act 1991 , Sched. 2 , which provides a common scheme for courts dealing with breaches of probation orders and community service orders .
2 The final variant on provision for cyclists occurs in areas where streets are relatively narrow and pass predominantly through housing districts .
3 It is understood Customs are checking for adverts placed in newspapers by the businessmen to promote their auctions .
4 For pairs assisted by helpers the corresponding figures were 2.1 and 1.3 ( n = 59 ) .
5 As the House of Lords Select Committee put it , ‘ It is consistent with the attribute of sovereignty in the international law sense for states to enter into groupings such as alliances or international organisations …
6 if you are a personal acquaintance of anyone with whom you are required to have business dealings during the course of your work , for example , if you have to deal with benefit claims or tenders for contracts made by friends or relatives .
7 We have issued an updated code of guidance for authorities dealing with applicants under the homelessness legislation .
8 Even if fixed investment in plant and machinery is not very interest sensitive , there are other components of aggregate demand that may well be : for example , investment in stocks , consumer demand financed through credit cards , bank loans or hire purchase , and the demand for houses financed through mortgages .
9 Boys diving for coins thrown by passengers into Funchal Harbour in the late nineteenth century
10 There is an option for institutions to subscribe for shares in individual authorities but that comes with the ominous warning that there is no guarantee the shares will be available .
11 The resolutions also call for more airtime for programmes dealing with women 's issues , and for the introduction of media education in schools .
12 The project examines possible approaches towards providing more relevant locally orientated curricula for rural children and strengthening links between the school and the rural community.J– To this end the formal school operates a single morning session of five hours leaving the rest of the day for projects undertaken by students which are seen as complementary to the in-class programme .
13 Parents should be reminded that they have a responsibility and that they can be fined and required to pay compensation for acts committed by juveniles .
14 Hungary on Jan. 18 , 1990 , suspended all licences for exports denominated in roubles in an effort to cope with the country 's growing trade surplus in relation to other member states of COMECON .
15 Marian 's work now suits her particularly well and in an effort to redress some of the solicitor 's problems described above she has begun to be involved in advocacy training for solicitors assisting in courses run by the College of Law — helping others towards the successful career which she demonstrates is possible from whatever your legal origins .
16 The county offers certificates in the teaching and learning of adult basic education and a particular option is available for tutors working with students with severe learning difficulties .
17 The waning popularity of polyphonic song , whether for voices only or for voices doubled by instruments , during the first half of the seventeenth century , is remarkable all over Europe .
18 A NEW directory of scientific research projects at Oxford University is available free for companies looking for opportunities to collaborate with academics or transfer their technology to the marketplace .
19 ( b ) An executor or administrator for trespasses committed to goods of the deceased after his death but before probate is granted to the executor or before the administrator takes out letters of administration .
20 One is to tighten the screws by making life offices liable for losses suffered by investors on financial dealings with their agents .
21 The importance of compliance with Conduct of Business Rules and other statutory provisions lies in the fact that a loss of authorisation will mean that an investment business ( such as KPMG ) will no longer be able to carry on its investment activities ; indeed liability to damages may be incurred for losses suffered by investors through breach of Conduct of Business Rules .
22 The House of Lords held that trade unions could be sued , in effect , for losses sustained by employers as a consequence of strike action .
23 Documentary evidence of the economic damage caused by these animals has only recently become available with the institution in Italy of a programme to refund farmers for losses caused by wolves , which are legally protected .
24 There was no decision on compensation for losses incurred by businesses .
25 The war-time legacy of the five-shilling legal maximum on restaurant bills was an open cheque for profiteers to pose as restaurateurs .
26 The term illuminated has , of course , been borrowed for books printed in colours in medieval style .
27 A cheeky innocence was imparted to the ruined photo by Nicola 's prominent front teeth : her vanity and the ambition to succeed in television must have made her pay later for cosmetic dental work , concluded Dexter , who had an acute eye for wigs worn by men and corsets by women .
28 The Coordinator is responsible to the Head of Area Staff for the work patterns of Area Secs and Admin Assistants in their individual regions for matters dealing with resources .
29 The general safety requirement is encapsulated in s10(2) which provides : ( 2 ) For the purposes of this section consumer goods fail to comply with the general safety requirement if they are nor reasonably safe having regard to all the circumstances , including ( a ) the manner in which , and purposes for which , the goods are being or would be marketed , the get-up of the goods , the use of any mark in relation to the goods and any instructions or warnings which are given or would be given with respect to the keeping , use or consumption of the goods ; ( b ) any standards of safety published by any person either for goods of a description which applies to the goods in question or for matters relating to goods of that description ; and ( c ) the existence of any means by which it would have been reasonable ( taking into account the cost , likelihood and extent of any improvement ) for the goods to have been made safer .
30 We are introducing a fitness programme and more emphasis will be placed on reception arrangements for visitors calling at sites . ’
  Next page