Example sentences of "[coord] subject to [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Sinfield believed that they were often irredeemably tainted by ideology , at best to be read only in historical terms , or subject to symptomatic readings , seeking the fractures and fissures in the mystified surface of the text that showed the ‘ true ’ ideological conditions in which it was produced .
2 Consent may be valid in certain contexts or subject to certain conditions and invalid in other contexts and or when the conditions are not met .
3 The Advisory Committee has agreed with the Director 's proposal-either as it stood or subject to specified modifica-tion ;
4 This resounds with the buzz of contradictory definitions of the female as being natural or subject to cultural intervention .
5 The last Trabant car was produced in April 1991 while the Buna chemical works in Halle and Carl-Zeiss Jena ( the optics business ) were among operations either closed or subject to severe reductions of scale [ see also p. 38155 for other companies affected ] .
6 Thereafter it was continually in need of repair or subject to minor alteration until the Reformation , given a Lady Chapel for the cult of the Virgin in the later thirteenth century and , most obviously , a spire in the fifteenth century , making it one of the best landscape features of any medieval building , far less uniformly oppressive than Salisbury .
7 This is classed as economic loss and subject to Junior Books v Veitchi , is only recoverable in a contract action .
8 The solution lies in internal cross-charging ( or feeing ) mechanisms which are negotiable and subject to external comparison .
9 All proposals should be subject to a conservation assessment by ADAS ( with NCC advice as necessary ) and subject to existing prior approval arrangements in National Parks ( and statutory consultation of SSSIs ) .
10 Now children began to be weaned traumatically at an early age and subject to parental authority in childhood .
11 Laws attempting to regulate corporate activity tend to be excessively vague , consist of ambiguous definitions , and subject to subtle but significant shifts in meanings ; or at least , that is how they can be interpreted , particularly by those desiring to violate them .
12 If you physically vacate your home and let it for profit — perhaps because you have decided to live permanently with a friend — under tax law , the property would be treated as an investment and subject to certain exemptions would be assessed for CGT when it was sold .
13 One feature that is peculiar to criminal justice agencies in England and Wales is the extent to which they are encouraged to exercise discretion under conditions of low visibility and subject to minimal restraint on the part of other bodies .
14 Like the courts themselves , the police also operate under conditions of low visibility and subject to minimal restraint on the part of other agencies .
15 Intensively hunted during the nineteenth century , they have more recently been managed and subject to controlled hunting on South Georgia ( Laws , 1960 ) .
16 And since you push the issue , Wilson , my husband is a man too — no Robert , let me finish — he is a man too and subject to like temptation and to the charge of masculine appetites and yet I do not doubt his fidelity , wherever he goes .
17 If re-introduced at any future date , it is recommended that they should be fixed at not above 30% of costs and subject to prior approval from NPAs within National Parks .
18 Unix Labs maintains that 32V was a limited publication , further restricted by contractual restraints and subject to limited publication law and therefore did not require a copyright notice .
19 USL maintains that 32V was a limited publication , further restricted by contractual restraints and subject to limited publication law and therefore did not require a copyright notice .
20 This conclusion was based upon the general perception that pre-1939 aviation was overly competitive and unregulated , and subject to vicious throat-cutting in the national interest .
21 Many other examples can be found in the field of agriculture , since it is heavily regulated , technical and subject to frequent change .
22 These shifts were not without their contradictions and sustained challenges : they were products of complex pressures , and subject to various influences .
23 Its deputies were elected directly at factory level and subject to immediate recall , while on its Executive Committee members of the socialist parties played prominent roles .
24 One is the requirement that contracts in the independent sector should go from now on ( except in ‘ exceptional circumstances ’ and subject to minimum standard requirements ) to the highest bidder : the other is the reduction in the programme obligations which at present safeguard the claim of minority programmes to television time .
25 Even the simple head counting involved in a census can be difficult and subject to international inconsistencies .
26 The issuance of the cumulative dollar preference shares is conditional upon the approval of LASMO 's Shareholders and Preference Shareholders , which will be sought at a meeting to be held on 25th May 1993 and subject to favourable market conditions .
27 As we show later , the question of scale is complex and subject to rapid alteration in contemporary markets .
28 As a result , the agriculture industry is in the ironic situation of being in the vanguard of scientific and technological progress and subject to rapid and innovatory change , yet with a reputation for being backward and conservative and the very antithesis of modernity when it comes to its labour relations .
29 Certainly nature 's use of chance , by accident , incident or mutation , is therefore selective and subject to sensitive principles of a physical , chemical , organic and ( many of us suspect ) a spiritual , balance : a universal ecology .
30 Rules within this network about how couples should relate to particular categories of kin are often unclear and subject to considerable variation between families , and this ambiguity itself provides a clue about the nature of the modern nuclear family .
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