Example sentences of "right [coord] [noun] [prep] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 9.4 Disputes with adjoining occupiers If any dispute arises between the Tenant and the tenants or occupiers of other parts of the Centre or the Adjoining Property as to any easement right or privilege in connection with the use of the Premises and any other part of the Centre or the Adjoining Property or as to the boundary structures separating the Premises from any other property it shall be decided [ by the Landlord or in such manner as the Landlord shall direct or by the Surveyor acting as an expert and not as an arbitrator ] The problem with this provision is that it restricts the tenant in any action it may wish to take against other tenants , and could result in a dispute being settled against its best interests .
2 Any use of any resource in education is only right or wrong in relation to its success or failure in helping people learn .
3 For the traditional ‘ act ’ utilitarianism acts are right because they maximise ( or at least increase ) welfare , while for rule utilitarianism rules are morally binding because general adherence to them maximises , or would maximise , welfare , individual acts being right or wrong in virtue of their conformity to such rules .
4 It does n't teach you what is right or wrong in terms of style but does allow you to practice and develop ideas with almost consummate ease .
5 Lord Scarman said : ‘ The principle is that parental right or power of control of the person and property of his child exists primarily to enable the parent to discharge his duty of maintenance , protection and education until he [ that is , the child ] reaches such an age as to be able to look after himself and make his own decisions . ’
6 The judgement of right and wrong by reference to theories , social connections , etc , often with false but clever reasoning .
7 Moreover , just as Moore thought that freedom from the naturalistic fallacy made one more ready to recognize that there is a plurality of basically different sorts of good thing , so Ross thought that freedom from this wrong definition of right and duty in terms of good made one ready to recognize that there is a plurality of grounds of obligation , of which the obligation to produce good and reduce bad is just one , or rather two , for he thinks the duty to prevent bad a distinct , and usually more stringent , duty than to produce good .
8 In the light of the Revenue 's press release of 14 April 1988 such mechanisms are usually not necessary since the press release confirms there should be no tax charge under ss77 to 87 provided there is no manipulation of share rights or restrictions in consequence of which value is shifted into management 's shares .
9 Kaynak ( 1985 , p.15 ) defines the consumer movement ‘ as a movement seeking to increase the rights and powers of buyers in relation to sellers ’ and presents a useful historical account from the first cooperative society , founded in Scotland in 1769 , to the present .
10 Employers were prepared to tolerate these rights and provisions in return for a profitable economic environment .
11 They include the compulsory closing-out or invoicing back of the defaulting member 's contracts , the liquidation of his collateral security and the substitution of a settlement amount ( to be determined by the relevant exchange ) for the member 's rights and liabilities in respect of an uncompleted delivery contract .
12 One rationale for asserting that individuals are bound is that the treaty becomes incorporated into municipal law by ratification , and therefore creates rights and duties for individuals within the jurisdiction .
13 The Convention is confined to international transactions , the Directive prescribes minimum rights and duties for parties to domestic transactions .
14 This is not the first time that this issue has reached the public domain , or will it be the last time that the House is asked to focus on the rights and duties of citizens in circumstances — from time to time inevitable circumstances — when the interests of one individual or one set of individuals necessarily impinge on and potentially damage the interests of others .
15 The rights and duties of individuals towards each other are together known as private law which in Anglo-Saxon countries , such as Britain and the United States , tends to derive from custom as incorporated by judges through time in what is known in Britain as the common law .
16 ( a ) Under the Partnership Act As already mentioned , Pt II of the Partnership Act contains certain basic provisions to regulate the rights and duties of partners in so far as they are not defined in writing or otherwise discernible in some course of conduct .
17 Treaties , like any other form of agreement , characteristically incorporate both rights and duties as part of an interlocking bargain .
18 Section 24 lays down the basic default rules as to the interests and duties of partners subject to their special agreements : The interests of partners in the partnership property and their rights and duties in relation to the partnership shall be determined , subject to any agreement express or implied between the partners , by the following rules : ( 1 ) All the partners are entitled to share equally in the capital and profits of the business , and must contribute equally towards the losses whether of capital or otherwise sustained by the firm .
19 There is the irony : that , just when British Empirical Socialism had come to terms with the idea of a mixed economy , when it had accepted that for the indefinite future a public sector and a private sector would co-exist , when the tangle of objections which the Webbs had seen to the development of a privately-owned industrial co-operative sector had been so far cleared away as to open the path to a natural growth of industrial democracy by a means which , because it reconciled the rights and interests of labour with those of ownership , would have been sustainable , the Labour Government ignored or overlooked the opportunity .
20 To buy out Edmund 's rights and interests in Champagne after Jeanne de Navarre 's marriage in 1284 cost Philip the Fair at least 14,200 livres tournois ( l.t . ) .
21 It 's the ultimate insult when that politician belongs to a political party that throughout twelve years of Government has washed his hands of any responsibility for the rights and aspirations of people with disabilities .
22 A whole series of arguments against correctionalism can be discerned , originating from various sources , but all gaining impetus in the 1960s and early 1970s : the corrective stance was seen as being inappropriate to an academic discipline in that its partiality had the effect of distorting the nature and appearance of the phenomena it was studying ; it was seen as neglecting the possibility that crime may have positive qualities and consequences ; correctionalism was seen as having led to the violation of fundamental human rights and principles of justice in its single-minded quest for efficient crime control .
23 Private law primarily concerns the rights and obligations of citizens against and towards one another .
24 But in peacetime if the neutralisation were not accompanied by demilitarisation the states signing the treaty would not have any rights and obligations with respect to this territory .
25 The English had not been acquiring new subjects in the first century and a half of their overseas expansion ; for the next century and a half they acquired new subjects at a rate which would have been quite inconceivable if they had been dealing with men and women who thought about their political rights and obligations in terms of nationalism .
26 The characteristic of a chattel slave is that he(she) has no recognized kin who have continuing rights and obligations by virtue of their kinship .
27 We 've all had a good laugh about it , but it does raise the question of trespass and the rights and wrongs of access to runners , ’ writes Dave .
28 We will extend the rights and responsibilities of prisoners along the lines recommended by the Woolf Report , and create the post of Prison Ombudsman .
29 In 1987 , Killingworth bureau was actively involved in promoting among young people an awareness of their rights and responsibilities concerning contacts with the police , especially since the police and Criminal Evidence Act came into force .
30 Not only did the WEA have providing rights and responsibilities in negotiations with the Board of Education and LEAs but it enhanced its position and status in seeking funds from philanthropic bodies to support pioneering , experimental schemes for the provision of adult education , particularly in rural areas .
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