Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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31 Following his commission as flight lieutenant RAFVR he specialized in upper-air analysis and forecasting for bomber groups .
32 Obligations undertaken through consent or respect are voluntary or semi-voluntary obligations .
33 ‘ I WOULD LIKE TO TRY BONDAGE BUT I DO N'T KNOW HOW TO GO ABOUT IT . ’
34 This difference is emphasized when one examines how Porter proposes to go about cost reduction .
35 I had to go about north-north-east , and if I hit the coast in the wrong place I could go first one way , then the other , until I came to the shingle where I had left the dinghy .
36 He further indicated how the Department hopes to go about restructuring .
37 Now , having checked out the way EUROAIM functions , we may decide to go as part of their umbrella .
38 For we understand that Dexter — the man who sacked David Gower — is set to go as chairman of selectors .
39 Or perhaps more accurately , the designed object is validated as museum display through the discourse of design history .
40 This is what I hate about politics , it 's just .
41 Shoppers will have more in their pockets and it will not cost companies vast sums to borrow for expansion .
42 All the same there is a strong argument that low investment in the British economy is not just a matter of funds being unavailable ; there is a reluctance to borrow for investment purposes on the part of many enterprises .
43 There could have been a serious road accident with a dozen or so frightened animals careering about country lanes .
44 It is important to train your dog to accept grooming as part of its regular routine .
45 Malik , who rescued Rugby from extinction in 1986 by buying the clubhouse from the liquidators , has alleged breach of contract in commercial dealings with the club and has used his ownership of the drive and car park to sue for trespass .
46 This shift in the meaning of marriage was accompanied by changes in married women 's property rights and in the grounds women could use to sue for divorce , both of which benefited primarily middle class women .
47 Lawyer Mark Scoggins advises some of our biggest insurance companies on workplace liabilities , he believes workers could soon be able to sue for stress damage , costing British firms and their insurers , millions .
48 It was in response to what Lord Penzance called ‘ sensational cases of cruelty ’ that the first law giving working class wives an opportunity to sue for separation and maintenance was passed in 1878 .
49 Richard took hostages from them and then sent them and other members of their league to England to sue for mercy at his father 's feet .
50 Do you know , the editor of the Observer has had six married men ringing him this morning , threatening to sue for libel ?
51 Held , allowing the appeal , that , notwithstanding the general principle that a trading or non-trading corporation was entitled to sue in libel to protect so much of its corporate reputation , as distinct from that of its members , as was capable of being damaged by a defamatory statement , a local authority , as a corporate public authority , was not entitled at common law to sue for libel to protect its governing reputation ; that to allow it to do so would impose a substantial and unjustifiable restriction on freedom of expression , since an action for malicious falsehood , or a prosecution for criminal libel , provided the local authority with the sufficient and necessary protection it required in a democratic society ; and that , therefore , the local authority could not maintain its libel action for any words which reflected on it as the county council for Derbyshire in relation to its governmental and administrative functions in that county ( post , pp. 41H , 48F–G , H — 49B , 56B–C , 58A–B , 59F–G , 65B–C , F ) .
52 Ltd. v. Hawkins ( 1859 ) 4 H. & N. 87 was authority for the proposition that it was an ordinary incident of all corporations ( including municipal corporations ) that they might sue for libel ; that case was only authority for the proposition that a trading company might sue for libel by which its property was injured ; ( 3 ) in holding that the Manchester Corporation case was decided per incuriam when there was no basis for so holding and he should have followed it ; ( 4 ) in holding that in bringing an action for libel not alleged to have caused actual damage , no valid distinction could be made between trading corporations and municipal corporations , which ignored the true basis on which a trading corporation was permitted to sue for libel , namely that it had a trading character , the defamation of which might ruin it : South Hetton Coal Co . Ltd. v. North-Eastern News Association Ltd. [ 1894 ] 1 Q.B. 133 , 145 .
53 ( 1 ) The right of a non-trading corporation to sue for libel
54 The Metropolitan Saloon Omnibus case concerned the right of a trading company incorporated under the Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 ( 19 & 20 Vict. c. 47 ) to sue for libel .
55 These are only two examples of cases where it should be possible for a non-trading corporation , which asserts that its reputation is capable of being damaged by the defamatory statement , to sue for libel .
56 This judgment , which demonstrates the ‘ chilling effect ’ which the ability to sue for libel may have on the right to criticise a public authority , was cited with approval by Brennan J. delivering the opinion of the United States Supreme Court in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan ( 1964 ) 376 U.S. 254 , 277 .
57 In City of Prince George v. British Columbia Television System Ltd. , 95 D.L.R. ( 3d ) 577 the argument against allowing a municipal corporation to sue for libel , based on freedom of speech , was rejected by Aikins J.A .
58 Counsel suggests that if municipal corporations have the right to sue for libel this right would give municipalities the power to suppress legitimate and proper criticism by threats of legal proceedings .
59 If a corporate public authority is unable to sue for libel it is , however , by no means without remedy .
60 They , if defamed , will have the right to sue for libel and , in the case of a libel upon the authority 's officers acting in the course of their duties , it may be that the authority will subvent their actions .
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