Example sentences of "[be] set [adv prt] [prep] a " in BNC.

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1 Hence it was decided that the pathway should be set up as a small demonstration project only and be fully evaluated before its concepts were more widely introduced into the school .
2 LANtastic is a peer-to-peer system and because the memory requirement of LANtastic is low , each computer on the network can be set up as a server and still function as a regular PC .
3 The former is making quite a name for itself , as it works well under Windows and as its device driver can be set up as a ‘ printer device ’ within Windows , the output of almost any Windows application that produces output to a printer , can be ‘ diverted ’ and sent as a FAX .
4 A National Integration Council would be set up as a forum for discussions on these issues .
5 Wilson also announced that a new Hong Kong Technology Centre was being planned as part of the overall strategy to boost the economy , that an International Business Committee would be set up as a means of tapping the talents of overseas businesspeople for the benefit of the whole community , and that £1,600,000 would be spent to bring pollution under control .
6 It is sometimes useful to encourage meetings to be set up as a form of ritual .
7 It has been suggested that such provisos are not effective in protecting a landlord from the severity of the law and can not be set up as a defence to the claim that by accepting rent the breach of covenant has been waived .
8 The crucial difference is that a trust could be set up with a non-heir as trustee , whereas legacies remained always bound to the need for an heir to discharge them .
9 Each Database can be set up with a range of users and passwords .
10 Under the merger terms , a French-based holding company known as RVC will be set up with a French-appointed chairman .
11 a committee may be set up by a board of directors to do ‘ spade work ’ and avoid detailed discussions at board meetings .
12 No links need be set up in a relational database between relations .
13 I think actually , you have to be set up in a conversation first .
14 For technical reasons the house had to be set back under a steep bank , and so feels slightly cramped .
15 The literature review will be set in to a general policy context of recent developments in the UK vocational training field .
16 If she will take you , you will be set down in a bare heath , on a great stone , which is made of granite and is the gate to your adventure , though it will seem to have been fixed and unmoving since the making of the world .
17 Thus , a whole range of decisions would not be left merely to the instinct of the doctor , good though he or she may be , but would be set down in a form which is at the same time authoritative , yet flexible and able to change if circumstances demand .
18 Since the mere association of words will not unambiguously point to meaning , the words need to be set down in a particular arrangement .
19 The limits to spending would be set out with a long-term perspective .
20 THE Home Secretary , Mr David Waddington , yesterday proposed a cut in prisoners ' parole rights as a main ingredient of a shake-up of the criminal justice system to be set out in a government white paper next month .
21 If you have already made an application to the tribunal , perhaps to obviate the risk of missing a crucial time limit should negotiations collapse , the detailed terms might , if it is thought appropriate , be set out in a separate document while you withdraw your claim on form COT 4 .
22 The charter explicitly promised the privatisation of British Rail , detailed plans for which were supposed to be set out in a white paper .
23 This provides that the terms of a contract with a sole member/director must either be set out in a written memorandum or be made the subject of a report to the next available board meeting and recorded in the board minutes .
24 If an agreement is reached the terms will then be set out in a heads of agreement .
25 The trend of judge-made law may be set off by a case involving an atypical trade or may be located in a consumer transaction .
26 Moreover , a similar or larger proportion claim either to enjoy the frequent change of tasks and environment , the flexibility of " temping " and of being able to take spells off between assignments , or to have commitments which make continuous working impossible ; even if , as one recent survey ( Manpower , 1986 ) showed , this was Sometimes to be set off against a feeling of employment insecurity .
27 The balance on a client account may not be set off against a sum owed to LCH on any other kind of account .
28 Here Alice and Philip exchanged , with their eyes , feelings about Jim ; exactly as people looked but did not speak , apprehensions over Faye — as if something there was too dangerous for words , or at least volatile , to be set off like a risky electronics device by an injudicious combination of sounds .
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