Example sentences of "need for [adj] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The report ended enigmatically : ‘ a potential problem exists … it is clear that air pollution , particularly in the form of acidic deposition , is affecting many aspects of forest ecosystems in Britain and there is an obvious need for continued detailed monitoring . ’
2 However , there are many other changes within the White Paper which clearly do impact on the financial structure and the need for better financial information and management .
3 The Group 's FInal Report , published in December 1990 after two intensive surveys in 1986 and 1988 , highlighted the need for better operational control of the sewage works and the need to prevent incidental pollution .
4 He said that if deputies took such a blinkered view of property relations and of lessening the economic power of the state over production , they would be unable to draw up a logical law reflecting the need for better social conditions .
5 Thus , for example , the National Council of Social Service submitted a wide-ranging document summarizing the principal issues : the deficiencies in existing pensions coverage ( such as the continued operation of means-testing through the 1940 supplementary pensions scheme ) , the urgent need for better medical assistance for pensioners outside the Public Assistance Committee services , the lack of institutional provision , and so on .
6 There is an urgent need for better archival storage facilities .
7 There is no need for actual permanent deprivation ; that is , s.6 belongs to mens rea , not actus reus .
8 Our own housing programme identified an immediate need for 2,686 new homes in Middlesbrough alone , ’ he said .
9 Gimson was a deeply solitary man with a contradictory need for close male friendships .
10 The dodder 's ability to lead a parasitic life thus depends on its ability to develop haustoria , an evolutionary adaptation which in one stroke has rendered redundant the need for two major organs ; the roots for supplying water and minerals and the green leaf for preparing food through photosynthesis .
11 As you know from our submission , sir , n we 've taken a more modest requirement for the Greater York area , and that 's based to some extent upon what we think is is achievable there , we 're not saying that erm the figure should not be higher , we 're not saying that the H B F figure for instance should nu not be er put in there , but what we 're saying is if that higher figure does go in because of the clear constraints on the provision of additional land the the higher figure may well mean that there 's a need for two new settlements ra rather than just one .
12 On the individual level , a decision to adopt the Second Choice , would introduce the overriding need for two new elements in human development , ( a ) , personal self-control , and ( b ) , the requirement to develop a response to the emotions which does not damage , more than can be avoided , the happiness of others .
13 Detecting mutations by hybridising products of the reaction with allele specific oligonucleotides is possible , although again the need for two distinct procedures is a drawback .
14 Involving pupils in these tasks as a project can increase interest and emphasise the need for good personal organisation , which will be invaluable for pupils with poor sight both at school and after leaving it .
15 By the same token , there is a need for good new shopfront design that is highly individual in style but respects the character of the buildings above and beside it .
16 There is a need for good internal communications , and an accepted policy on enquiry handling .
17 As soon as several partners are involved the need for good financial control systems is emphasised by the need to maintain equity between partners and perhaps relate profit shares to job profitability .
18 The world still has vast interests in the private sector that often go unchallenged ; the need for good public services is probably more important than ever ; and there exists still cruel poverty for many millions amidst great wealth …
19 Considerations on which they seem to draw include : how they construe their role as members of the police , which is itself informed by their interpretation of the organizational mandate of the force , by informal organizational requirements and occupational culture , and by local community expectations ; their knowledge of locale ; whether constables are able to resolve the momentary demands of the situation ; and their ability to handle the complex mix of law enforcement , local expectations , and the need for good public relations .
20 In the late 1950s a perceived need for many more graduates , combined with political pressure for a less elitist system , resulted in a more centralised approach , with the creation of a Minister for Education and Science in 1969 .
21 Why is there a special need for such extra income on the west coast ?
22 For lending banks , the need for such prior authorisation might place a moral commitment on a country 's government to repay bank loans incurred by state enterprises .
23 The Government 's response in the White Paper on Reform of the Law on Consumer Credit ( 1972 ) Cmnd 5427 , para 14 stated : The Government accept that there are aspects of the existing law in this field which cause difficulty , but they do not have sufficient evidence either of a need for such major recasting of existing law on new principles or of general support for the particular solution proposed by the Committee .
24 The need for such longitudinal research into the structure of career opportunities is made pressing by the present and likely future decline in promotion opportunities in the UK .
25 Yet the very need for such public show-trials , apparently highlighting the fragility of the Soviet Union , its vulnerability to fascist and capitalist subversion , must inevitably have been a cause of concern and growing disquiet .
26 You will soon get to know those publications which are regular users of your transparencies , and provided the pictures usually come back safe and sound there is no need for such formal contracts .
27 Only the state could afford and had the need for such high-technology commodities .
28 This would involve the government in thinking about the need for new international institutions to oversee such a convention .
29 From intensive trading arose changes in the life style , values and population structure of local communities , massive over-use of resources , and the need for new economic inputs to maintain northern communities at even a minimal standard of living .
30 ( The value of such trade had more than doubled between 1988 and 1990 , to a record US$705,000,000 , as US firms sought to capitalize on Cuba 's need for new financial partners . )
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