Example sentences of "[noun sg] [to-vb] and deal with " in BNC.

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1 Companies have sought to deal with these pressures in ways which reduce their fixed overheads , increase their responsiveness to their markets and enhance their capacity to adapt and deal with change .
2 ( See table 12.1 ) The Democrat President Carter had great difficulty in getting even his most basic requests through a Congress controlled during 1977–80 by 2:1 Democratic majorities , a failure that was put down to Carter 's unwillingness and/or inability to bargain and deal with members of Congress .
3 So , for example , Burns and Stalker ( 1961 ) were able to divide forms of management structure into mechanistic and organic , the former being appropriate for firms operating under relatively stable market conditions because routine decision-making handles unchanging tasks efficiently , and the latter being appropriate to rapidly changing product environments where there is a continuous need to innovate and deal with new and unpredictable problems .
4 This should enable the purchaser to identify and deal with risks before contract rather than seeking redress from the vendor after completion .
5 By s.5(3) : [ w ] here a person receives property from or on account of another , and is under an obligation to the other to retain and deal with that property or its proceeds in a particular way , the property or proceeds shall be regarded ( as against him ) as belonging to the other .
6 The court said that a failure to pay a debt was not theft and held that there was no obligation to retain and deal with the money in a particular way .
7 ( d ) Meech held that the accused was under an obligation to retain and deal with a cheque if he believed that he was under such a duty , though in fact he was not .
8 Three files were full , now , and Yggdrasil created its own spellcheck to access and deal with the problem .
9 I was referred to R.S.C. , Ord. 55 , r. 3 which refers to the appeal being by way of rehearing , but that of course is the same phrase as is used in R.S.C. , Ord. 59 which states that appeals to the Court of Appeal are by way of rehearing and , to put it shortly , without quoting from the note to that rule , it is plain that all that means is that the Court of Appeal has a wide ranging power to consider and deal with the way in which the court below came to its decision but it is not empowered to hear evidence , except in certain exceptional circumstances : see , too , Rayden and Jackson on Divorce and Family Matters , 16th ed. ( 1991 ) , p. 1388 , para. 49.2 .
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