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

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1 Moat Hall lay in a fold of the hills perhaps a mile from the A1 .
2 This has serious implications for policy-makers , especially when they consider the future of the DRAs where the risks are greater and the margins more extreme .
3 To hit all my bad shots down the side of the fairways where the lines of spectators are the deepest .
4 It 's uncapped you know the thing you put in banging of the guns under a hundred years , it has n't got that in it .
5 Primary encopresis A full assessment of the reasons why the child has never achieved continence is required .
6 The section provides the procedure whereby the holder of a licence ( other than an off-sale licence ) may obtain the consent of the licensing board to the reconstruction or alteration of the public or common part of the premises where the reconstruction or alteration is not so material as to be excluded by subs .
7 Where a club has applied the section , the secretary must notify the licensing board for the area of any alteration to , reconstruction of or extension to , that part of the premises where the main meal is provided .
8 Close inspection of the boundaries where the flat slabs of colour meet reveals the smallest traces of undercoats of carrying shades subtly indicating the changing process of their origin and belying the direct certainty of their appearance .
9 The study of interactions and relationships that constitute the social structure of these various rearing units has begun to provide a description of the rules whereby the structure is maintained from generation to generation .
10 That magic could be both proto-scientific and protoreligious is most transparent in the literature of the Paracelsians where a critique of traditional , Galenic medicine was developed within a magical philosophy that demanded an initiation into the secrets of chemistry .
11 Such phases may reflect the work of individual workshops , individual craftsmen breaking new ground , or the conservatism of the consumers once a type was fully developed .
12 Nevertheless , by 1800 a commoner was speaking with regret of the times when the undrained wastes had given him pasture , where ‘ he could turn out his cow and pony , feed his flock of geese and keep his pig ’ .
13 The carrier 's description of the goods is prima facie evidence of the receipt of the goods where the shipper is concerned , but is conclusive evidence of receipt where the good faith consignee is concerned .
14 The prominence of some Lettish names in the last days of Soviet communism is a reminder of the days when the Lettish riflemen were to Lenin what the Swiss guards are to the Pope .
15 It dominates the town from any direction , looking across the river and seeming to peer cautiously at the last limb of the Jura mountains in the distance , a reminder of the days when an enemy might appear in the valley below .
16 It is not a job that can be undertaken on the basis of a business meeting of the governors once a term .
17 It had been a very different story with the earlier sell-off of the hotels where the managers ' interest had not been shown proper respect .
18 ( 2 ) Apart from any such contract , express or implied , the place of delivery is the seller 's place of business , if he has one , and if not , his residence : except that , if the contract is for the sale of specific goods , which to the knowledge of the parties when the contract is made are in some other place , then that place is the place of delivery . ’
19 It is , however , possible for the seller to be exempted from liability under sections 13 to 15 of the Sale of Goods Act , but only in so far as the seller can show that the exemption clause satisfies the requirement of reasonableness , i.e. that it was a ‘ fair and reasonable one to be included having regard to circumstances which were , or ought reasonably to have been , known to or in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made ’ ( section 11 ) .
20 How does the basic principle that damages are based on the losses that were within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made work in the context of computers ?
21 The test is laid out in section 11 of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 which requires that the term be : fair and reasonable … having regard to the circumstances which were , or ought reasonably to have been , known to or in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made .
22 Section 11(1) applies the test of reasonableness to an exemption clause by asking whether it is a " fair and reasonable [ exemption clause ] to be included having regard to the circumstances which were , or ought reasonably to have been , known to or in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made " .
23 Section 11(1) of the UCTA states that the test for reasonableness is that the term must have been " a reasonable and fair one … having regard to the circumstances which were , or ought reasonably to have been , known to or in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made " .
24 In relation to a contractual exclusion clause , the test is whether the clause was " a fair and reasonable one to be included " in the contract " having regard to the circumstances which were , or ought reasonably to have been , known to or in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made " ( UCTA 1977 , s11(1) .
25 Section 11(1) of the 1977 Act states : 11 – ( 1 ) In relation to a contract term , the requirement of reasonableness for the purposes of this Part of this Act , section 3 of the Misrepresentation Act 1967 and section 3 of the Misrepresentation Act ( Northern Ireland ) 1967 is that the term shall have been a fair and reasonable one to be included having regard to the circumstances which were , or ought reasonably to have been , known to or in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made .
26 He kept to the inside of the bends where the current was fastest and more powerful than the onshore wind .
27 That it is so rare is due , in very large part , to the efficiency of the processes whereby the House , particularly the government party , lets it be known what it will and will not tolerate .
28 I was near the Bridge of the Spaniards when a car overtook me and stopped , the door was opened and a very friendly fellow at the wheel invited me in .
29 The landlord has parted with control of the premises so the tenant will be the occupier .
30 Past the entrance to a farmyard rutted deep in soft mud , and he could see the slipped roofing of the barns where the fallen tiles had been replaced by corrugated iron .
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