Example sentences of "of [noun] of goods " in BNC.

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1 Has the Minister had time to have a look at the table published in European Economy , which clearly shows that in terms of the annual change in the volume of exports of goods and services between 1979 and 1990 , the United Kingdom had a worse record than any other European Community country ?
2 It is to include the date of removal of goods or of their arrival , a description of the goods sufficient to identify them , the value or consideration involved and , if the goods are subject to a process , then a description and value of the process .
3 Costs include : buying or leasing the new property ; building and refurbishment ; staff costs ( including redundancy/severance payments , retention payments if staff are to be encouraged to stay until the move goes ahead , recruitment and training costs for new staff and relocation and removal allowances for those moving ) ; communication costs ( including the installation of telephone and telex facilities and changes to stationery ) ; occupancy costs ( including rent , rates , lighting , heating and security ) and other costs ( such as new machinery and the cost of removal of goods from the old to the new site ) .
4 This type of carriage of goods is regulated by international convention .
5 Contemporaneously with the CMI's adoption of its Sea Waybill rules , the English and Scottish Law Commissions prepared a report with respect to ‘ Rights of Suit in Respect of Carriage of Goods by Sea . ’
6 The Awards announced on the Queen 's birthday are to recognise and encourage outstanding achievement in the field of export of goods or services from the UK , and together with Awards for Technological Achievement , were instituted by Royal Warrant in 1976 .
7 ( Although it was as long ago as 1884 that Marx wrote of the shift from worker as producer to worker as consumer , the degree of expendability of goods and their constant replacement by better and newer models has markedly increased during the latter half of this century . )
8 The air waybill was designed as an acknowledgment of receipt of goods from the consignor , and as a notice of shipment to the carrier ( and especially to his agent at the destination ) , a notice which would also enable the identification of the consignee .
9 ‘ ( 1 ) Where a member state prohibits retail premises from being open on Sunday for the sale of goods to customers , save in respect of certain specified items sales of which are permitted , and where the effect of the prohibition is to reduce in absolute terms the sales of goods in those premises including goods manufactured in other member states , and correspondingly to reduce the volume of imports of goods from other member states , is such a prohibition a measure having equivalent effect to a quantitative restriction on imports within the meaning of article 30 of the Treaty ?
10 Such arguments as these suggest that price subsidies and in-kind transfers do not possess quite the overwhelming advantage for the stimulation of consumption of goods that appeared to be evident above .
11 He also realized that if large-scale economic and social organization on Marxist lines was ever to replace the small-scale realities of early Soviet life and improve the volume of exchange of goods between manufacturing plants and the villages , then efficient railways would serve as the thin edge of the wedge .
12 Many thanks to all who helped by way of contributions of goods , clothes or money , and special thanks to for their help and support .
13 In principle , this made profitable the speculative holding of stocks of goods whose price rose only at the average rate .
14 1992 and the creation of the ‘ Single European Market ’ means that barriers are being progressively removed to encourage freedom of movement of goods , services , capital and labour .
15 The seven EFTA countries will embrace community legislation covering the freedom of movement of goods , services , capital and people .
16 If , as Marxism postulates , the final catastrophe of Capitalism is to be triggered by a crisis of under-utilisation of capacity and of over-supply of goods , then the General Theory provides the remedy : a positive investment policy by the State and deficit financing in certain circumstances .
17 An unconditional contract of sale of goods which are specific and ready for deliver is sufficient to transfer the ownership without any delivery .
18 ‘ Where a right , duty or liability would arise under a contract of sale of goods by implication of law , it may ( subject to the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 ) be negatived or varied by express agreement , or by the course of dealing between the parties , or by such usage as binds both parties to the contract . ’
19 The Unfair Contract Terms Act applies to hire-purchase contracts in exactly the same way as it does to contracts of sale of goods .
20 There are certain other contracts which are not contracts of sale of goods but which are analogous contracts because the ownership of goods passes under them , e.g. contracts of exchange and barter and contracts for labour and materials supplied ( see Chapter 8 above ) .
21 The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 applies to these analogous contracts in the same way as it applies to contract of sale of goods .
22 The statutory terms ( as to title , description , quality and sample ) implied by sections 2–5 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 are dealt with in the same way as the corresponding terms implied in contracts of sale of goods .
23 The Unfair Contract Terms Act applies , with one small difference , to hire contracts as it does to contracts of sale of goods , hire purchase , barter and exchange , etc .
24 It is the hall mark of a contract of sale of goods that the parties enter into a mutual commitment that the buyer thereby acquires or shall acquire ownership of the goods .
25 Each of these is a type of contract of sale of goods and each has the characteristic that the buyer is committed to acquiring ownership of the goods .
26 ‘ Conditional ’ and ‘ Credit ’ are commonly used to describe contracts of sale of goods where the price is payable in instalments .
27 INTRODUCTION AND DEFINITION OF CONTRACT OF SALE OF GOODS
28 For example , the sale of a newspaper for 20p from a stand in the street , the sale of industrial machinery for millions of pounds to a large company and the sale of aircraft to the government are all equally contracts ( i.e. agreements ) of sale of goods .
29 Before the definition of a contract of sale of goods is 1–3 considered , something must be said of the history and sources of the law relating to sale of goods .
30 It is still true to say that the law of sale of goods today is basically the common law , i.e. the law as stated over the years by judges in the process of deciding cases before them .
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