Example sentences of "[vb infin] [conj] [art] [noun sg] is " in BNC.

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1 A situation may arise where a family is involved and the father is unable to return to the U.K. If he requires someone to remain with him it would be unfair to say the children would have to go home alone .
2 Circumstances may arise where a card is retained by an Abbeylink machine .
3 As the course lengthens the bed of the distributary will be built up and the situation may arise where a levee is breached and a new shorter course to the sea made available .
4 The situation may arise where the taxpayer is on the face of it chargeable to tax under Case V of Schedule D and also caught by Part XV of the Taxes Act 1988 .
5 Problems may arise where the foreman is bribed or negligent and excessive hours are claimed by the sub-contractor .
6 If you follow football you will already know that a substitute is a man who takes the place of another player .
7 We have to let customers know that a sale is taking place .
8 These take place in the real world and those involved do not know that an experiment is being conducted .
9 Lovers of Italy will know that the resort is linked with the famous Villa Carlotta and the lovely old town of Tremezzo by a huge avenue of plane trees known as the ‘ Via del Paradiso ’ .
10 You do need to , to let the children know that the service is there .
11 Or you take no action , in which case no one else will know that the clause is unenforceable .
12 One very simple little point , surprisingly often overlooked : if you find ‘ Finis ’ or ‘ The End ’ , you will know that the goal is reached .
13 For if it is not , how can anybody know that the government is still ‘ derived from public opinion ’ , i.e. is still representative ?
14 In other words the tippee must , first , obtain from an individual , information which he knows to be unpublished price sensitive information ; secondly , he must know that the individual is a ‘ connected individual ’ within the meaning of the legislation ; thirdly , he must know or have reasonable cause to believe that that individual holds the information by virtue of being so connected ; and finally , he must know or have reasonable cause to expect that that individual should not have disclosed the information save for the proper performance of that individual 's duties .
15 It will be better , perhaps , if she does not wholly know that the will is in question . ’
16 The accused need not know that the act is unlawful : Newbury , DPP v Daley [ 1980 ] AC 237 ( PC ) .
17 Slip along to the mortuary office , would you , Sergeant , and see if you can get some cardboard boxes for the cartridges , and wrapping paper and string for the clothes , while I let the doctor know that the body is ready for him . "
18 Similarly , whilst the defendant will almost always know that the victim is a woman , circumstances could be imagined in which a man charged with attempted rape in fact intended to have sexual relations with a man .
19 A central charging light comes on to let you know that the battery is being charged .
20 The actual state of the market is that it 's flooded with property , so we have a case where supply has increased , demand is still at a fairly low level , so we 're having to be very honest with our clients , our vendors , and let them know that the situation is that their property has to be of good value in the market place .
21 This applies only where the person dealing with the company does not know that the action is beyond the powers of the company 's directors under its constitution ( s. 35A(1) — ( 3 ) CA ) .
22 ‘ In that case you will know that the rupee is in a parlous state . ’
23 We need not doubt that the epithet is justified and I think we are on the right track in attributing its powers to nerve cells with their trigger features and projective zones , but the connecting links are missing .
24 Hilary Rowland , Chief Executive of the Trust said : ‘ Most people would recognise that the building is under-used at present and costing us money .
25 Perhaps they should recognise that the countryside is not just a theme park where everything is nice , woolly and furry , but that real combat occurs between animals .
26 A Legacy by Sybille Bedford ( Picador , £5.99 ) — Readers of Jigsaw , her outstanding semi-fictionalised autobiography , will recognise that the legacy is Sybille Bedford 's own , and this book , too , is a joy .
27 ‘ Both Government and the European Commission must recognise that the consumer is an essential part of the marketplace , ’ she said , introducing the group 's annual report .
28 Throughout church history , and as we move towards the eschaton , we must recognise that the world is not yet kingdom territory .
29 The advantage of this is that , given that you have got to exchange witness statements anyway , there is always a chance that your opponents may consider that the evidence is not crucial or controversial and allow the statement to go in without the witness being called .
30 Nor do I consider that the principle is advanced by identifying specific categories such as husband and wife or elderly parents and adult children ; the principle applies whenever a creditor knows or ought to have known that the relationship between debtor and the surety gives rise to a real risk that the surety may not contract freely and with a full appreciation of the nature of the obligation being assumed .
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