Example sentences of "not be subject [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 None the less , this was a significant change from the days of the old CEB , which ( though hedged about by precise legal requirements on matters such as pricing ) had not been subject to government limits on finance ( choosing to raise its fixed-interest capital without government guarantee ) and had ignored ministerial requests when it felt they were unjustified ( being protected against the sanction acquired by the Minister in 1947 : the power of dismissal ) .
2 These were leaders who had not been subject to party screening or peer review and had succeeded almost exclusively on the strength of their appeal to mass electorates .
3 It is important to realise that divine impassibility is an aspect of God 's immutability , that God is utter perfection and completely self-sufficient and therefore can not be subject to change .
4 " A surplus shall not be subject to transfer when that surplus , together with any other surpluses at that particular stage of the count not already transferred , is —
5 There are two considerations : first , it must be positioned so that it can be connected easily to the existing stopcock and to the branch which feeds the drinking water tap in the kitchen ; second , it must be positioned so that it will not be subject to frost damage .
6 Section 7 provides simply that ‘ The decisions of the Tribunal ( including any decisions as to their jurisdiction ) shall not be subject to appeal or liable to be questioned in any court . ’
7 A provision that a decision shall not be subject to appeal ( or that it shall be ‘ final ’ ) does not oust judicial review .
8 The following should not be subject to commision by the manager :
9 You could covenant all your taxable income if you wished — remember though that a part of your total income will not be subject to tax , because of the various tax allowances you enjoy ( personal allowances , mortgage interest relief , etc . )
10 The question was whether there was any reason , based on the nature of the power or the circumstances of its exercise , why it should not be subject to review for reasonableness and fairness ; in other words , was the decision or action ‘ justiciable ’ ?
11 It is relevant to recall in this connection that Younger did envisage situations where mere observation could seriously impair privacy — where , for example , the person observed had a reasonable expectation that he would not be subject to observation , or had deliberately taken steps to prevent surveillance , but special technical devices , either optical or electronic ( bugging ) , were used to spy upon him .
12 Therefore , it was not property " belonging to another " , and so could not be subject to theft .
13 The decision in In re A Company shows that Parliament can by the use of appropriate language provide that a decision on a question of law whether taken by a judge or by some other form of tribunal shall be considered as final and not be subject to challenge either by way of appeal or judicial review .
14 This might be fixed , e.g. a loan with a fixed interest rate and repayment date , or variable such as dividends on ordinary share capital ( common stock ) , the latter not being subject to repayment by the issuer , as the corporation will be in existence indefinitely , e.g. British Petroleum plc or General Motors .
15 But the fact is no lender can ever be absolutely sure that a guarantor is not being subject to pressure from the principal debtor , and to require him to do more than properly and fairly point out to the guarantor the desirability of obtaining independent advice , and to require the documents to be executed in the presence of a solicitor , is to put upon commercial lenders a burden which would severely handicap the carrying out of what is , after all , an extremely common transaction of everyday occurrence for banks and other commercial lenders .
16 It should n't affect most of them , because manufacturers tend to use disks made in the US , which wo n't be subject to duty , and the EC ’ .
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