Example sentences of "the [noun pl] [pron] give " in BNC.

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 At this juncture Chairman er it is I think worth reemphasizing that the County Council is progressing a further selective alteration to the structure plan , not a fundamental review of the strategic approach or indeed the policies which give effect to it .
32 It is also structured by the biographical situation of the person using the term and the definitions they give to their work role .
33 Ltd v. Heller & Partners Ltd and Anns v. London Borough of Merton as the authorities which give rise to this proposition .
34 It might be the authorities who give you permission but when it comes to the bit it 's the ordinary policeman who 's getting shot .
35 There may be facts that are not known to the warrantors which give rise to that liability .
36 It 's hardly surprising then , that we get confused by the signals he gives out — now more than ever .
37 They are the only British side left in Europe after Englishman Mark Hateley and lethal Scot Ally McCoist KO 'd Leeds with the goals which gave Rangers a 4–2 second-round aggregate win .
38 Shamed Souness said : ‘ I 'd rather not talk about the goals we gave away and concentrate instead on the pluses . ’
39 ‘ Chesterfield worked hard but we made things easy for them with the goals we gave away . ’
40 In the hitherto unpublished Leeds University evaluation of the 1991 Key Stage One National Curriculum Assessment , teachers rated the tasks they gave to children as rather more challenging than did observers , and were rather more generous than the observers in their estimates both of the frequency of open questions and of the opportunities they gave pupils to volunteer opinions .
41 Little by little , however , the force of this long glen beneath the austere greyness of the Five Sisters touched Johnson , and he moved his position from that of first considering the political role of such remoteness , and the opportunities it gave for military strategies and subsequent escapes — Glenshiel had been the scene of a battle fifty-four years earlier in which local Highlanders unsuccessfully reinforced a Spanish invasion force — to being lulled by the sight of so many waters , brooks , burns , and silver rivulets , ‘ which commonly ran with a clear shallow stream over a hard pebbly bottom ’ .
42 The rewards for those working in BP come in the quality of the opportunities it gives us for the future .
43 He folded it open at a page of stocks and shares , and as he was looking down the lists he gave the man two dollars .
44 So be careful about the subjects you give .
45 ‘ It is simply that I have different ideas than the gentlemen who give places to men … . ’ .
46 All the trappings of Christmas — the decorated tree , lights , the presents we give , the crib , tinsel , crackers , the eating and drinking which make up our celebrations — are only ‘ signs ’ .
47 It was the military deficiencies of the pomeshchiks which gave the government the greatest grounds for concern .
48 Yet if we are to be realistic in our starting-point we must accept that the relationships which give rise to nuclear catastrophe are likely to be relationships between sovereign states , each able to possess and deploy armed force for their own interests .
49 It was while she was reading one of the books they gave her — by a philosopher called Christ — the next day by the lamp-light that she suddenly realized what that gemmed necklace had said .
50 I only read a little in the books he gave me , picked up what I could .
51 ‘ Archaos ’ was n't a flop in relation to the performances they gave .
52 I can not remember a single one where the risks which gave rise to the accident could not have been measured and prevented with effective safety training , management commitment and — above all - sufficient funds .
53 Even under Edward 's guidance it proved difficult to feel my way into the texts he gave me to read .
54 As it takes about two years to convert an idea to law through our parliamentary system , new legislation is often implemented at a time when the circumstances which gave rise to the idea have substantially altered .
55 In this regard an employee who is the victim of a violent incident whilst undertaking such temporary duties and , as a result , is absent from work will be paid the appropriate allowance at the higher rate for as long as the circumstances which gave rise to this temporary arrangement continues .
56 Looking at episodes from the Middle East and Africa , this project will investigate the circumstances which give rise to such mass departures , examine their socio-economic dimensions , and consider the policy options available to deal with them .
57 It is worrying , therefore , that the NIRC in Hudson ( Birmingham ) Ltd v Winsper opined : ‘ If they [ the employers ] want to make it absolutely certain that no tribunal will dissent from their dismissing the driver who is convicted of dangerous driving , then they should , in fairness to themselves and the driver , post a notice or otherwise bring it to the attention of all their drivers that any conviction for dangerous driving , regardless of the circumstances which give rise to it , will lead to dismissal .
58 ( 4 ) In determining the value of an action under paragraph ( 1 ) ( a ) : ( a ) the sum which the plaintiff or applicant reasonably expects to recover shall be reduced by the amount of any debt which he admits that he owes to a defendant in that action and which arises from the circumstances which give rise to the action ; ( b ) no account shall be taken of a possible finding of contributory negligence , except to the extent , if any , that such negligence is admitted ; ( c ) where the plaintiff seeks an award of provisional damages as described in s 32A(2) ( a ) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 , no account shall be taken of the possibility of a future application for further damages ; ( d ) the value shall be taken to include sums which , by virtue of s 22 of the Social Security Act 1989 , are required to be paid to the Secretary of State .
59 The same result can also be achieved by excluding the circumstances which give rise to an implied term .
60 The legislature creates a rather abstract mandate and an agency to implement it , while only defining explicitly the offences which give rise to prosecution .
  Previous page   Next page