Example sentences of "[adj] loss " in BNC.

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1 Politically we are on a hiding to nothing in the long run and so I guess the only satisfactory way forward would be to leave badgers completely alone and compensate farmers in full for badger-related losses , including consequential losses . ’
2 The Wren insurance mutual of some 40 major firms is offering a package tied up with an optional extension to cover consequential losses at the owner/occupier/tenant 's expense .
3 It is backed by a £15 million insurance warranty covering product liability on defective material , damage to property and consequential losses .
4 This will be controlled by the likely direct and consequential losses of goods and operating availability of the storage , and the long-term economic effect this will have on the industry which uses the storage .
5 It was for the cost of having the floor relaid and also for consequential losses ( i.e. lost profits arising from lost production while the factory was closed to enable the floor to be relaid ) .
6 ( 1 ) The contract can exclude liability for certain types of loss : " the seller shall not be liable for any consequential losses suffered by the buyer " ( but on the effectiveness of this formula see Croudace Construction Ltd v Cawoods Concrete Products Ltd [ 1978 ] 2 Lloyds Rep 55 ) .
7 3 Damages for Non-Pecuniary Loss
8 Again , in Wright v British Railways Board [ 1983 ] 2 AC 733 Lord Diplock said of non-pecuniary loss :
9 That the appropriate award for non-pecuniary loss may vary in differing social and economic conditions in different parts of the world has been stated by the Privy Council in Jag Singh v Toong Fong Omnibus Co [ 1964 ] 1 WLR 1382 , per Lord Morris :
10 Usually when assessing damages in respect of non-pecuniary loss a court will award one lump sum in respect of " pain and suffering and loss of amenities " and in such cases it is generally impossible to say how much relates to " pain and suffering " and how much to " loss of amenities " .
11 The Current Level of Awards for Non-pecuniary Loss
12 The decision of that court in Housecroft v Burnett [ 1986 ] 1 All ER 332 has had the effect of substantially reducing the damages for non-pecuniary loss in the most serious cases .
13 This is due to the likelihood of the technical loss of material in proceeding through the protocol , the possibility of a weak hybridization signal from small weakly labelled sequences and the need to be able to score a statistically significant sample of silver grain counts .
14 As the Labour losses and Conservative holds flashed on the screen , desperate looks were exchanged .
15 This was increased by a further NZ$3.049bn for non-cash costs , mostly unrealised losses on forex liabilities and depreciation ; and reduced by NZ$0.428bn in respect of net capital expenditures .
16 On Aug. 18 Finance Minister Tsutomu Hata had attempted to restore confidence by announcing a series of measures aimed at discouraging financial institutions from selling shares until the end of September , and allowing them to postpone the reporting of unrealised losses on share holdings until the end of the financial year , in March 1993 .
17 ( 4 ) The aggregate of each of the following in , or relating to , the customer 's account at the close of business on the last business day of that month : ( a ) cash ; ( b ) collateral value ; ( c ) unrealised profits attributable to open positions ; ( d ) unrealised losses attributable to open positions ; and ( e ) any management fees .
18 Shipping lost £11 million after taking unrealised losses on the value of dollar loans which finance the shipping fleet , and losses in mechanical engineering widened to £23.2 million , mainly due to the depressed market for ship fittings and equipment .
19 A court notice reported the economic loss of the two vehicles , but did not mention any military casualties .
20 His father , he said , had the right to make decisions of that kind , and perhaps he was aware of the long-term economic loss he would suffer from withdrawing from the joint enterprise .
21 It was claimed that closure would affect the local atmosphere since the school acted as a focus of activity yet there was little mention of any economic loss and no fear of any demographic effects .
22 ‘ It is not only the economic loss of the things they have stolen from them but the fear , which in some cases leads to long-term psychological consequences which , if the victim is elderly , may never go away . ’
23 the complexity of science , which renders forging a direct causal link between corporate practice and the death , injury , or economic loss of employees , consumers , and the general public , very difficult to prove ‘ beyond a reasonable doubt ’ , particularly when those ‘ experts ’ called in to testify to the relationship add so many qualifications and possibilities that almost everything appears possible but nothing certain .
24 Did the decision extend to all negligently caused economic loss or was it confined to economic loss sustained in consequence of physical harm ?
25 Did the decision extend to all negligently caused economic loss or was it confined to economic loss sustained in consequence of physical harm ?
26 What then has happened with regard to cases of economic loss ?
27 At bottom I think the question of recovering economic loss is one of policy .
28 Referring specifically to the decisions on economic loss , Lord Denning later in his judgment observes :
29 It seems to me better to consider the particular relationship in hand , and see whether or not , as a matter of policy economic loss should be recoverable .
30 He regards both economic loss which is occasioned by physical damage and ‘ pure economic loss ’ regardless of physical damage to be recoverable .
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