Example sentences of "[num] of the [noun sg] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 It is impossible for the seller to exempt himself from liability under section 12 of the Sale of Goods Act .
2 ( The purchaser could , of course , have brought an action against the vendor under section 12 of the Sale of Goods Act . )
3 Round 2 of the championship at Brands Hatch on Sunday was supported by a grid of 30 cars and the race was full of incidents during the 20 laps .
4 [ ( 3A ) Liability for breach of the obligations arising under section 2 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 ( implied terms about title , etc in certain contracts for the transfer of the property in goods ) can not be excluded or restricted by references to any such term . ]
5 In compiling this book I am extremely grateful to Butterworth & Co Ltd for allowing me to reproduce precedents and text from Volume 22 of the Encyclopaedia of Forms & Precedents ( 5th edn ) .
6 Section 22 of the Sale of Goods Act provides :
7 However it is possible in some cases to obtain a broad indication for 1985 of the contrast between firms with over 1000 and those with less than 100 employees although the data is for manufacturing industry rather than all employees .
8 It is also known that the low-rate stratum contains two-thirds of the population of households .
9 What is significant is the extension since 1979 of the range of issues in the first category which the Conservative leadership regards as ‘ high politics ’ , that is , which it regards as being within its own sphere of decision-making .
10 R v Secretary of State for Home Department , Ex parte Kuku ; CA ( Woolf , Nicholls and Staughton LJJ ) ; 28 Sept 1989 It is highly desirable that foreign nationals to whom r 10 of the Statement of Changes in Immigration Rules HC 169 applies should not only by warned by the Home Office of the necessity under s 3(4) of the Immigration Act 1971 of obtaining a visa if seeking re-entry to the UK after a short visit abroad , but that that warning should take the form of a document attached to the foreign national 's passport , so there is no question of any misapprehension .
11 see that er paragraph three of the statement of claims sets out the history of the transaction a and pleads the relevant facts .
12 It is agreed that in the case of goods we may exercise the aforesaid rights of rejection notwithstanding any provision contained in s 11 or 35 of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 .
13 Yet we hear so much in chapters 1–3 of the faithlessness of men in high positions in Israel ( chapter 4 will tell us that Eli was not only high priest at Shiloh but for forty years ‘ judge ’ in Israel , the one in whom resided the greatest political and spiritual as well as judicial authority among all the tribes ) .
14 Rule 41 of the Statement of Changes in Immigration Rules ( HC 169 ) provides : ‘ A man seeking to enter the UK for marriage to a woman settled here and who intends to settle here thereafter ’ will be refused entry clearance unless the ECO is satisfied that it is not the primary purpose of the marriage to obtain admission to the UK .
15 SECTION 57 OF THE SALE OF GOODS ACT
16 Indeed , as we saw in Chapter 3 , sections 17 and 18 of the Sale of Goods Act expressly recognise that property passes to the buyer at the time the parties intend it to .
17 ( It is an offence under section 5 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 to be in possession of cannabis . )
18 Between 1959 and 1977 the number of offences per 100,000 of the population for males aged 14 to under 17 increased by 148 per cent , compared to a rise of 136 per cent for males aged 21 and over — hardly a massive difference .
19 The distinction had particular reference to article 4 of the Bill of Rights 1688 ( 1 Will .
20 If your experiment involves large groups of informants , then you also need to think about the significance of numerical results you may produce ; and for this , guidebooks about experimentation and the use of statistics may be needed ( see sections 1 and 4 of the Booklist for suggestions ) .
21 It is not too much to say that this interpretation of what appears the plain meaning of section 4 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act , 1974 , would make a farce out of the children 's hearing system .
22 The implications for the children 's hearing system of section 4 of the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act , 1974 , appear at first sight to be far-reaching and disastrous .
23 Section 6(2) of the UCTA prevents exclusion of liability for breach of the warranties relating to conformance to description , conformance to sample , merchantable quality , and fitness for purpose which are implied by ss 13 , 14 and 15 of SGA , for sale of goods contracts , and ss 9 , 10 and 11 of the Sale of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 , for hire purchase contracts .
24 Section 6 ( 3 ) of UCTA prevents exclusion or restriction of liability for breach of the warranties relating to conformance to description , conformance to sample , merchantable quality , and fitness for purpose which are implied by ss 13 , 14 and 15 of SGA , for sale of goods , and ss 9 , 10 and 11 of the Sale of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 , for hire purchase contracts , unless such exclusion or restriction passes the test of reasonableness .
25 Education was taking one in ten of the output of students and employed 18 per cent of those with jobs .
26 The provisions of section 25 of the Sale of Goods Act and section 9 of the Factors Act have already been considered ( see paragraph 5–32 above ) .
27 Also note that , since Lee v. Butler , sections 9 of the Factors Act and 25 of the Sale of Goods Act have been amended .
28 The most likely exception is that contained in two almost –33 identical statutory provisions , section 25 of the Sale of Goods Act and section 9 of the Factors Act 1889 .
29 Therefore if the hirer sells the goods , section 25 of the Sale of Goods Act and section 9 of the Factors Act will not operate to give his purchaser a good title .
30 A buyer under a conditional sale agreement which is a consumer credit agreement within the meaning of that Act ( see Chapter 19 ) , is for the purposes of section 25 of the Sale of Goods Act and section 9 of the Factors Act , not someone who has ‘ bought or agreed to buy , ’ ( Consumer Credit Act 1974 , Schedule 4 and section 25(2) of the Sale of Goods Act ) .
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