Example sentences of "to or [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 There will be a range of thermal beard extensions which will simply clip on to or over the existing facial fur , providing the customer with that little bit of extra insulation .
2 I have checked with our Information Services manager and he tells me that Wimpey did not take any photographs of military airfields prior to or during the war years .
3 Holders of one of the qualifications listed below who , in addition , may be required by the centre to undertake , prior to or during the early part of the course , a centre devised programme of bridging studies .
4 Were her average weekly earnings ( see page 20 ) equal to or above the lower earnings limit ?
5 Move the cursor on to or above the division mark
6 This assumes that the bathroom is next to or above the kitchen ( as is usually the case ) ; if running hot water to another room ( a bedroom , say ) will create a very long pipe run , it might be simpler to install a separate instantaneous or small storage heater .
7 The authors , who have done field-work in Madagascar , apply the theories of Lévy-Bruhl : the pre-logical mentality persists in civilised man , but becomes available only to or through the poet .
8 ‘ But the really bad apples in the seismic barrel , and a very sinister lot those are , too , are the so-called thermal hotspots , plumes or upswellings of molten lava that reach up to or through the earth 's crust , giving rise to volcanoes or earthquakes or both .
9 We studied 16 patients with proved ulcerative colitis ; eight had a disease extension to or beyond the sigmoid colon and eight had an isolated proctitis ( eight women and eight men , with a mean age of 35 years , range 20 to 75 ) .
10 The patients were grouped into those who had a disease extension to or beyond the sigmoid colon ( colitis ) and those who suffered from an isolated proctitis .
11 From 1978 to December 31 1990 all patients with longstanding ( >=8; years ) and extensive ( disease extending to or beyond the splenic feature ) ulcerative colitis were advised to have annual colonoscopy with pancolonic biopsy .
12 ‘ ( a ) as of right , from any final judgment of the Court of Appeal where the matter in dispute on the appeal amounts to or is of the value of 5,000 New Zealand dollars or upwards , or where the appeal involves , directly or indirectly , some claim or question to or respecting property or some civil right amounting to or of the value of 5,000 New Zealand dollars or upwards ; and ( b ) at the discretion of the Court of Appeal from any other judgment of that court , whether final or interlocutory , if , in the opinion of that court , the question involved in the appeal is one which by reason of its great general or public importance , or otherwise , ought to be submitted to His Majesty in Council for decision .
13 Aristotle derives it from " phallic songs " , which were a common constituent of Greek fertility ritual and would have been sung to or for a particular fertility god : this would usually , though not perhaps invariably , have been Dionysus . )
14 Stated generally , the fundamental rationale he offers for having to do so is that he , either himself or as the agent of society , knew better than the patient what should be done to or for the patient .
15 A later section ( section 256 ) defines them as ‘ statements of standard accounting practice issued by such body or bodies as may be prescribed by regulations ’ and goes still further by empowering the Secretary of State to make grants , ‘ to or for the purposes of bodies concerned with ( a ) issuing accounting standards , ( b ) overseeing and directing the issuing of such standards or ( c ) investigating departures from such standards or from the accounting requirements of this Act and taking steps to secure compliance with them . ’
16 In the case of settlements by virtue of which income is paid to or for the benefit of an infant unmarried child of a settlor , the definition is extended to include " transfers of assets " ( s670 ) .
17 Section 663 provides that where there is a settlement , and during the life of the settlor any income is paid to or for the benefit of a child of the settlor in any year of assessment , the income shall , if at the time of payment the child is unmarried and below the age of 18 , be treated as the settlor 's income and not the income of any other person .
18 Lord Morton of Henryton commenting on that example said that in each case it would be for the Commissioners to make a finding as to whether the income in question was or was not paid to or for the benefit of the child by virtue or in consequence of the settlement .
19 The first type deals with cases where monies may be assessed on the settlor if monies are paid to or for the benefit of a particular person .
20 For instance , under TA 1988 , s663(1) any income paid to or for the benefit of a child of the settlor may be assessed on the settlor .
21 If and so long as the terms of any settlement are such that any person has power to pay or apply income or capital to or for the benefit of the settlor or his spouse , all income arising under the settlement shall be treated for all the purposes of the Income Tax Acts as the income of the settlor for that year and not the income of any other person ( TA 1988 , s674 ; and see Blausten v IRC ( 1971 ) 47 TC 542 ( CA ) ) .
22 the income consists of annual payments made under a partnership agreement to or for the benefit of a former partner , or the widow or dependants of a deceased former partner , of the partnership , being payments made under a liability incurred for full consideration ; 2. the income is payable in connection with the acquisition of a partnership ; 3. the income arises under a settlement made by one party to a marriage by way of provision for the other after the dissolution or annulment of the marriage , or while they are separated under an Order of the Court or under a separation agreement or in such circumstances that the separation is likely to be permanent , being income payable to or applicable for the benefit of the other party ; 4. the income is from property of which the settlor has divested himself absolutely by the settlement ; 5. the income is income which under other provisions of the tax legislation is treated for the purposes of the Taxes Acts as that of the settlor .
23 Following an arrest the police may search the premises where the suspect was immediately prior to or at the time of the arrest for evidence relating to that offence ( s.32(2) ( b ) ) .
24 ( As to the date alleged , see Practice Direction ( Bankruptcy 4/86 ) ( 1987 ) 1 All ER 604. ) ( c ) In the strictly limited case of substituted service by advertisement under r 6.3 of the 1986 rules , the date to be alleged is the date of the advertisement 's appearance or , as the case may be , its first appearance : see rr 6.3(3) and 6.11(8). 6 There is no need to include in the preamble to or at the end of the petition details of the person authorised to present the petition .
25 to exercise the power contained in Article 134 ( B ) of the Articles of Association of the Company so that , to the extend determined by the Directors , the holders of Ordinary Shares be permitted to elect to receive new Ordinary Shares of 25p each in the capital of the Company , credited as fully paid , instead of all or part of any dividend declared or proposed to be declared at any time prior to or at the next Annual General Meeting of the Company ; and
26 After ethanol fixation of PMNL , proteinase 3 remains within the cytoplasmic granules , whereas myeloperoxidase and elastase become extracted and locate close to or on the cell nucleus .
27 Bites generally occur when someone has sat down in woodland , bracken or heather , unaware that they are close to or on an adder .
28 difficulty getting to or onto the lavatory because of a physical disability ;
29 The only potential drawback , and this relates to all four systems , is the presence of iron ore deposits , wire netting or overhead high-voltage cables close to or within the working area .
30 Some clearly occupied positions of convenience near to or alongside the main frontages , as for example at Chelmsford and probably Kenchester .
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