Example sentences of "[coord] [noun sg] of [noun] to the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Subject to sections 7 and 8 below , a person who has become a rehabilitated person for the purposes of this Act in respect of a conviction shall be treated for all purposes in law as a person who has not committed or been charged with or prosecuted for or convicted of or sentenced for the offence or offences which were the subject of that conviction ; and , notwithstanding the provisions of any other enactment or rule of law to the contrary , but subject as aforesaid —
2 The guardian may produce any copy he takes in his report or when he gives evidence and it will be admissible regardless of any enactment or rule of law to the contrary ( s42(2) ( 3 ) ) .
3 This method caused an immediate necrosis of the entire thickness of gastric wall under the area of acetic acid application ( about 28 mm ) but without perforation or penetration of ulcers to the surrounding organs as in the original technique .
4 30 cooks , nearly all men , were attending a sort of food summit in Paris called le Club des Chefs des Chefs , or Club of Chefs to the Chiefs , founded in 1977 .
5 From the first suspicion or disclosure of abuse to the criminal trial of the alleged perpetrator , children pass through a spectrum of services and professionals .
6 There can often be a poor correlation between acid reflux and the degree or type of damage to the oesophagus ; for example , there is not significant difference between the extent and patterns of reflux in patients with severe oesophagitis and those who have developed Barrett 's oesophagus .
7 The ad may alter or undermine an unfavourable attitude or group of attitudes to the brand ( which may have been based on ignorance or emotion … ) .
8 The soldiers bent over to form the arches but they were no good as they kept moving all over the place and there seemed to be no rules or sense of order to the game .
9 Judgment in favour of plaintiff or defendant and award of costs to the successful party .
10 He gave warning that complacency could easily result in slippage of standards and loss of sensitivity to the complex needs of children and their families .
11 It required LEAs to delegate certain responsibilities for financial management and the appointment and dismissal of staff to the governing bodies of schools ; permitted the governing bodies to delegate many of these responsibilities to head teachers ( see Chapter 8 ) .
12 It required LEAs to delegate certain responsibilities for financial management and the appointment and dismissal of staff to the governing bodies of the larger colleges remaining under LEA control .
13 Reports in late January spoke of a stalemate in the autonomy talks and of the effectiveness of the government 's economic blockade of Kurdistan [ see pp. 38458 ; 38598 ] which was enforced by a heavily fortified military line across north-eastern Iraq , running from Qasr-e-Shirin on the Iranian border east of Kirkuk and south of Arbil to the Turkish border west of Zhako .
14 All of these fungi are , of course , very important in the process of decay and recycling of nutrients to the soil .
15 and recovery of sight to the blind ;
16 Their lands bordered the lordships of Foix-Béarn on the east , the vicomté of Soule and community of Labourt to the south , and the petty lords of the Bordelais and Bazadais to the north .
17 Writing in June 1283 from Monflanquin , Jean de Grilly informed Edward that Armagnac 's proctor had already been sent to deliver the castle and town of Auch to the seneschal of Toulouse , to be held in liege homage from the French crown .
18 A lateral ‘ through-view ’ abdominal radiograph , taken with the patient in the knee-elbow position , confirmed fluid accumulation in dependent bowel loops and shift of gas to the sigmoid colon and rectum ( Fig 2 ) .
19 promoting entry and re-entry of women to the profession of chemistry ; and
20 The situation is , however , rather different when we move from ‘ pure ’ to ‘ practical ’ reason , from the analysis of the conditions and character of knowledge to the consideration of morals and action .
21 Mr Davies expressed relief at an increase in the number and scope of exemptions to the directive .
22 Either way , research of this kind can provide invaluable information , ‘ a way of evaluating the effectiveness of the organisation in conveying its goals , mission and code of conduct to the target publics upon whose support the organisation is dependent for continued existence . ’
23 The first step in the selection of the action and control areas in Ipswich and Newham was a study of the number and pattern of referrals to the hospital psychogeriatric services during the year prior to the commencement of the study ( that is , the year ending 31 July 1983 ) .
24 Later this month a private member 's bill that would require the government to disclose information on the safety and efficacy of drugs to the public should receive its second reading .
25 Imagine the indignity of trying to learn by heart , over breakfast , a set of opinions , which you will later claim as your own , on such subjects as your party 's policy on the amateur status of Rugby Union , female circumcision and devolution of power to the regional arts boards … and all morning your party agent sending you urgent messages that your whole campaign 's falling apart .
26 Finally , the representativeness and quality of contributions to the league table may be questionable .
27 Again the signal sources in the input and output circuits relate in both magnitude and sense of action to the output and input conditions respectively .
28 The subtle differences have brought a strength and depth of study to the discipline of building surveying and created the sense of identity so palpably missing in the 1960s .
29 Visiting the Upper Nile state on Feb. 21 he again referred to the exclusion of the southern states from sharia law and said that citizens had shown their support for the " new political system and transference of powers to the people " .
30 The most fundamental events in people 's lives are strongly affected by their social class , ranging from their chances of surviving the first year of life through likely age of marriage and number of children to the kind of diseases they are most likely to die of ( Reid 1977 ) .
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