Example sentences of "recognised in " in BNC.

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1 But it seems safe to say that there are circumstances in which litost and glasnost can be recognised as enemies , and that this enmity can be recognised in the novel Life is elsewhere .
2 And it is a condition which can be recognised in the reception of his work .
3 Euston-Northampton services , now recognised in their own right , jumped the queue in 1989 to receive new Class 321s with first-class facility .
4 The speaking invitation to Gerry Adams , the Sinn Fein president and MP for West Belfast , and vague expectations that a Tory Party branch may be recognised in North Down , have provided little encouragement of a parallel shift by Labour .
5 He could have boasted to world leaders of the model communist state he and his comrades have created , now widely recognised in the world , with happy contented people enjoying the highest standard of living in the Eastern bloc .
6 Mr Mandela , himself a royal member of the Tembu tribe , had a big hand in organising the event , as the General , a dapper 34-year-old in a double-breasted silk suit , readily recognised in an interview at his office here .
7 Prince Charles , he says , hates being recognised in public and has transferred these emotions to buildings .
8 The Cook & Co pursues the idea that no meal is made without sacrifice to an extreme conclusion that is macabre and funny , but there is an element of truth that ought to be more widely recognised in our squeamish society .
9 But she looked down through the glass skylight and recognised in Maggie 's cropped hair and long white body the same contours that she had seen in that other virgin warrior whom she had inspired into battle .
10 The great care taken by Michael Manser to conserve the majority of the existing building in his scheme for its conservation was recognised in European Architectural Heritage Year 1975 when he received a Civic Trust Heritage Year Award for the restoration and adaptation of Castle Mill .
11 While much of it may seem blindingly obvious , one non-NHS member of the team behind the strategy points out : ‘ Irrespective of the fact that the approach is well recognised in industry , it 's totally innovative in NHS terms .
12 About 20 syllables and 6 basic themes have been recognised in the whales ' singing , which can continue through day and night with only short pauses for breath .
13 Dolphins and their closely related cousins , the porpoises and small whales , show many of the attributes of Intelligence and social awareness which humans have recognised in the great whales .
14 The sin is recognised in me and people are afraid .
15 Meanwhile , after winning awards for its vehicle security systems , Vauxhall says it is ‘ deeply disappointed ’ that its initiatives have not been sufficiently recognised in the new ratings structures .
16 As a nationally ‘ Approved Association ’ under the 1921 Act , the WEA 's Districts were recognised in the 1924 Regulations as ‘ Responsible Bodies ’ because they organised , controlled and provided courses and classes , as did the universities .
17 If populations are to remain in the disadvantaged areas , and if the economy is to be diversified then the relationship between part-time farming and other complementary economic activities must be recognised in policy and fiscal terms .
18 MD 's principal product is methylphenidate , a niche drug used to treat attention deficit disorder in children ( a condition that is barely recognised in the UK ) .
19 This type of alteration is called saussuritisation , and other similar types of hydrothermal alteration can be recognised in the other igneous rocks of the igneous complex of south Harris where they crop out in the thrust zone .
20 A number of soil landscapes can be recognised in the Outer Hebrides related mainly through solid geology , glacial drifts , weathering and the accumulations of shell sand , peat and alluvium .
21 It is certainly the case that the idea that existence is not a predicate , a quality of things such as blueness or hardness , was clearly recognised in classical philosophy long before it was taken up by Kant in the eighteenth century and further refined by Bertrand Russell in the twentieth .
22 The House of Lords held that parental rights are recognised in law only for so long as they are needed for the protection of the child .
23 The distinctive profile of the eastern edge of the summit is a feature instantly recognised in the landscape of the upper Eden valley .
24 This benefit is not a free gift to women , as its enemies claim , but the equivalent of a tax allowance for having children ( recognised in other European countries ) , and it is targeted upon the very person on whom responsibility falls — the mother .
25 Beginning in the 1940s , they used Beef Shorthorn bulls on Highland cows and crossed the best of the heifers back to the Shorthorn bull , Cruggleton Alastair , and followed this with a careful and deliberate system of inbreeding and then line-breeding to establish the breed , which was officially recognised in 1965 .
26 The Jersey is certainly recognised in tropical countries as giving better results than other temperate breeds .
27 It is a hardy , thrifty , long-lived mountain breed which was first recognised in 1856 ; a breed society was formed in 1895 and a herdbook established in 1926 .
28 The breed was recognised in 1878 , and a herdbook established in 1885 ; there are also breed societies in New Zealand , the USSR and the USA ( American Red Dane , 1948–68 ) .
29 The breed was recognised in 1853 at a time when Tyssandier d'Escours did much to improve it , partly by using the red Devon which , in turn , is now being boosted with Salers blood .
30 The need for advice services at Tooting Bec psychiatric hospital was recognised in the early 1980s by a CAB community advice team .
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