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

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1 Kim 's mother took this idea further by making some of the activities given to Kim those that would involve her helpfully with the baby .
2 In fact , as an eminent Scottish banker remarked looking back from seven years on , it was remarkable , " after the first surprise and alarm was over , how quietly the country submitted , as they still do , to transact all business by means of bank notes for which the issuers give no specie " .
3 To make the formal application you will need to complete the forms given to you by your Environmental Health Officer .
4 The Acts gives us many examples of Christian people bearing witness to Jesus , in particular his death and resurrection , to soldiers and governors , prince-lings and mediums , crowds and individuals .
5 Noting that the conferences opening on Dec. 15 would " take due account of the opinions given by the European Parliament and by the Commission under Article 236 of the Treaty " , the Council confirmed that the work would proceed in parallel , should be concluded " rapidly and at the same time " , and that their results would be submitted for ratification with a view to this taking place before the end of 1992 .
6 I have to know that sort of thing otherwise I would n't know how hard to fire the retro-rockets to give you a gentle landing .
7 Let us content ourselves for the moment with finding out exactly which of the axioms given earlier are required to establish property M. First , then , we prove , giving all the details , Lemma 1.2.1
8 As an 11-handicapper who does not play quite as often as she would like , I found the clubs gave me more consistency and greater ‘ feel ’ .
9 Yet , under the proposals , auditors are required to consider whether the disclosures of matter giving rise to a going concern uncertainty are adequate for the accounts to give a true and fair view .
10 The Foreword to Accounting Standards stresses that compliance with accounting standards will normally be necessary in order for the accounts to give a true and fair view .
11 Instead of opinions expressed ‘ subject to ’ the effects of uncertainties , auditors will be required to express an opinion taking into account whether estimates an disclosures are sufficient for the accounts to give a true and fair view .
12 These are not the accounts given by spectators and it is difficult to imagine them offering such accounts .
13 For example , neo-Marxist analyses of bureaucracy and the division of labour have converged on the accounts given by elite theorists ( Parkin , 1979 ) ; and post-Althusserian and post-Gramscian Marxism is indistinguishable from pluralism except in its vocabulary ( Laclau and Mouffe , 1985 ) .
14 Complementary to that record we have the accounts given by those fans of those very occasions and others like them .
15 Social roles within each of the groups have been isolated primarily from the accounts given by fans and from prolonged observation in the London Road End .
16 In accordance with the main theme of this book the accounts given here are drawn from the school sector ( primary and secondary ) and concentrate on activities that were conducted at the level of the whole institution ( although , in practice , the whole of the school may not have become involved ) .
17 I asked the doctor about Dara Shukoh and Aurangzeb , and soon the doctor was telling us about the civil war and the accounts given of it by Bernier and Manucci .
18 The auditors ' report said : ‘ In our opinion the accounts give a true and fair view of the state of affairs at 31 March 1982 . ’
19 In addition , five and a half pages of notes to the accounts give valuable extra information .
20 the accounts give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Corporation at March 30 , 1991 and , in respect of the Corporation and their subsidiary undertakings regarded as a single entity , of the state of affairs at March 30 , 1991 , and the results and statement of cash flows for the year then ended , and have been properly prepared in accordance with the direction of the Secretary of State for Energy … , and
21 In our opinion the accounts give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and of the Group at 31 December 1992 and of the loss and cash flows of the Group for the year then ended and have been properly prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 1985 .
22 In our opinion the accounts give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and the Group at 27th March 1993 and of the profit of the Group for the financial year then ended and have been properly prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 1985 .
23 In our opinion the accounts give a true and fair view of the Association 's affairs at the thirtieth of September nineteen ninety two and of the surplus and cash flows for the year ended on that date and have been properly prepared in accordance with the Companies Act Nineteen Eighty Five and that report has been signed Chartered Accountants , registered Auditor .
24 No depreciation is provided on the freehold investment property and the directors consider that this accounting policy results in the accounts giving a true and fair view .
25 No depreciation is provided on the freehold investment property and the directors consider that this accounting policy results in the accounts giving a true and fair view .
26 Discuss how each of the above should be dealt with in the accounts giving reasons for your decisions .
27 ‘ It is easier for the institutions to give us records of all accounts rather than trying to strip out just those accounts which paid above a certain level of interest .
28 Mannheim compared the meanings given to social being to the givenness of language and it is difficult to imagine the individual ‘ affiliating ’ to their first language , exactly because of its givenness to the individual as part of social being .
29 This is structured through participation in social actions and in interaction with other people and institutions , and through the meanings given to these .
30 Now all of this may well have made no difference to the final result ; the courts reading of the facts may have led them to the same conclusion whatever the meanings given to reasonable and unreasonable .
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