Example sentences of "goods to [be] " in BNC.

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1 The latter designated special weeks for the production or collection of goods to be contributed to the aid programme .
2 There was over-capacity in road haulage as the amount of goods to be transported went down and prices were cut .
3 Sunday trading laws allow fancy goods to be sold in souvenir shops , but the complaint against the Trust at Blickling is about the sale of clothing and plant holders .
4 It is not uncommon for goods to be carried by road from a European destination through several countries to a port , where they were then loaded on board a ship , taken to another continent and again despatched by road to their final destination .
5 Should the sender require goods to be delivered by a certain date and having shown this date on the consignment note , the carrier is committed to meet that delivery date .
6 It would not allow Palestinian goods to be exported westwards to compete against its own produce in the European market .
7 Most of these are consumer goods to be distributed to shops locally and nation-wide .
8 A manufacturer can thus borrow funds to purchase raw materials and machinery and to hire labour to produce goods to be sold later in the market , with the resultant receipts ( money ) being used to repay loans .
9 The latter reveal a general growth in prosperity , with more solid goods to be left after death .
10 Businesses identified by Customs as needing to complete SSDs should have received a copy of the Intrastat Classification Nomenclature , which provides classification codes for goods to be recorded on the SSDs .
11 Such items would only become liabilities when contracts are placed for the goods to be provided or the work to be carried out .
12 Compared with the figures on page 26 cars are particularly likely to be financed by loans from banks or finance companies ; clothes , presents and luxury goods to be bought on mail order , and rarely financed by HP or loans ; and , as might be expected , domestic appliances to be bought using fuel board credit ( see Appendix I , Table 17 ) .
13 Given the carrier 's obligation to obtain the best possible price for the goods to be sold , good advice on what constitutes such a price in prevailing market conditions must surely be taken .
14 He estimated the goods to be worth about £3,000 .
15 The result was described by a leading U.S commentator as a ‘ free contract of carriage … to the point where it could be said that the carrier accepted the goods to be carried when he liked , as he liked , and wherever he liked . ’
16 negligently allowing the goods to be stolen ) would not make him liable for conversion though if he were a bailee of the goods he might be liable in detinue in such circumstances .
17 In the sixteenth century it was found more convenient and safer for these goods to be transported overland to the ports of northern Italy , where they were picked up by Ragusan merchants .
18 The term ’ prime cost sum ’ is defined in SMM6 as ’ a sum provided for work or services to be executed by a nominated sub-contractor , a statutory authority or a public undertaking or for materials or goods to be obtained from a nominated supplier ’ .
19 Storage heights of 50 m appears to be a distinct possibility , racked rather than stacked goods to be the general trend and an increasing degree of automation to be likely .
20 The distinction between public and private spheres of existence has been used for centuries to exclude women from the activities through which larger social processes are effected ; it has made of them goods to be protected , the stakes for which wars are fought by men .
21 In what purports to be his will ( 9 May 1313 ) , which is singular in style , Schorne spoke of old age and rendered to God what was God 's ( his soul ) , to the earth what was the earth 's ( his body , in a tomb he had designated before the high altar of North Marston ) , and his goods to be divided between intercessors and the poor , for the welfare of his soul .
22 The quantity of goods to be ordered , and the time at which they should be ordered are major considerations .
23 Paragraph ( e ) would be particularly relevant where the purchaser required the goods to be made or adapted from some use for which the seller did not normally supply goods .
24 In Thomas Young v. Hobson ( 1949 C.A. ) the seller made a contract for the goods to be carried at ‘ owner 's risk . ’
25 As the port took shape and London became the trading centre of Europe , an elaborate system of canals was built , leading away from the Thames , ramifying throughout the UK and enabling goods to be transported inland .
26 How should society make plans today for the quantities of goods to be produced and consumed in the future ?
27 In Chapter 14 we introduced the concept of a forward market , in which buyers and sellers made contracts today for goods to be delivered in the future at a price agreed today .
28 Equally , it is possible for goods to be delivered to the buyer some time before they become his property .
29 ‘ The goods which form the subject of a contract of sale may be either existing goods , owned or possessed by the seller , or goods to be manufactured or acquired by him after the making of the contract of sale , in this Act called ‘ future goods . ’ ’
30 It was held that Maidstone market was a market overt because it was established by charter in 1747 and that the innocent purchaser obtained a good title to the car because it was customary at Maidstone market for goods to be sold by private treaty after the auction .
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