Example sentences of "[conj] [art] child is " in BNC.

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1 9% of affected births are caused by malformations and syndromes which are again largely unidentifiable until screening occurs or the child is born .
2 If there is no luck after a few days or the child is showing antagonism to the potty then the parent should leave the training for a few more weeks .
3 If the child has the capacity to make an informed decision , the solicitor should not divulge the information without his consent unless he knows or suspects that younger children are being abused or the child is in fear of his life or serious injury .
4 The relevant ages of consent in English law vary : 16 seems to be the general age , but the offence of gross indecency with or towards children only applies where the child is under 14 , and the age of consent for homosexual offences is 21 and the recommendation is to lower it only to 18 .
5 Where the child is being praised for new behaviour it should be rewarded immediately .
6 Time is appropriate where the child is required to do something at or by a particular time .
7 Teachers may give their verbal assent to such precepts as the need to " start where the child is " and to " individualise children 's learning " .
8 Another type of game that involves a lot of reading , and where the child is required to process large amounts of information , take decisions on the basis of that information , and see the consequences , is the simulation .
9 This process of imitation is an example of pure accommodation , where the child is at the mercy of the environmental events it encounters .
10 ( 4 ) Included within the ‘ extraordinary ’ or ‘ special ’ category might be , for example , cases where the child is proposing to submit to a sterilisation , an abortion , the removal of an organ for donation , or some similar non-therapeutic procedure , or where the child is refusing to submit to some procedure necessary to prolong or save the child 's life or to protect the child from really serious and irreparable harm .
11 Where the child is incapable of giving a valid consent , it is standard practice to seek parental consent where this is possible .
12 Where the child is of sufficient understanding the local authority must also obtain his consent before departing from the terms of an order .
13 ‘ For instance , should a child who has run away from home ring and ask that their parents be contacted , then the counsellors will do that and tell the mum and dad concerned where the child is , ’ she says .
14 A shocked community where every child is kept on the tightest rein
15 But it is still against the spirit of the Act to impose restrictions on contact where a child is accommodated by a local authority .
16 Dual assessments will be most common where the local authority is assessing a child 's special educational needs under the Education Act 1981 or where a child is disabled and the assessment is for the purposes of the Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act 1970 or associated legislation .
17 Where a child is a party to proceedings and required to serve a document , service must be effected by the child 's solicitor or by the guardian ad litem where the child has no solicitor .
18 Thus , a care order may be made for the " appeal period " where a child is the subject of an interim care order at the time the application is dismissed .
19 In the 1960's , the American ’ Look and Say ’ method was introduced , where a child is taught to recognise the whole word .
20 I would say that the child is capable — more or less — of recognizing that other people have mental states different to his own .
21 Under the Children and Young Persons Act 1933 , judges must be satisfied that the child is of sufficient intelligence to justify the reception of the evidence and understands the duty of telling the truth .
22 Under an ESO the supervisor will be under a duty to ‘ advise , assist and befriend , and give directions ’ to — ( 1 ) the supervised child ; and ( 2 ) his parent(s) ; in such a way as will ensure that the child is ‘ properly educated ’ .
23 It may be observed that the object of EWO intervention under the ESO is to ensure , in the words of the Act , that the child is ‘ properly educated ’ .
24 Parental responsibility appears here in the form of a duty to ensure that the child is examined ; there is an offence on failing without reasonable cause to comply with requirements of a notice requiting the child to be examined at a stipulated place and time .
25 It may already have been established that the child is likely to be mentally handicapped ; it may , for example , be known to be brain damaged , or Down 's .
26 Such measures will ensure that the child is carried successfully and born in a healthy condition .
27 In the harder nosed environment that we are now facing there will be times when schools in the public sector have to balance the needs of an individual disruptive child against the effects that the child is creating amongst other children and their parents .
28 These remain unused for the entire time that the child is in nappies .
29 Try to understand that the child is bound to be angry and resentful .
30 Sometimes an observant parent will notice something that will give us a clue ; after a child recovers from one of those high fevers that ‘ lay it very low ’ for a short time it is sometimes seen that the child is more ‘ well ’ than before it became ‘ ill ’ , provided the illness has not been inappropriately treated or interfered with in some way .
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