Example sentences of "point of [noun] of [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 As to the point of ownership of lorries , that would not in itself have provided a defence .
2 This volume of essays and interviews , edited by a consultant psychotherapist at Broadmoor , examines the experience from the point of view of actors such as Brian Cox , Mark Rylance and Claire Higgins , directors Ron Daniels and Deborah Warner , and members of the hospital staff .
3 From the point of view of women , satisfaction with the birth , postoperative morbidity , and the implications of caesarean section for the mode of delivery in future pregnancies are also important .
4 So you get , if you like , a development here er of presidential authority and the perception of the presidency both from the point of view of incumbents and from the point of view of the American people and gradually in the twentieth century you get an increasing focus an increasing focus on the presidency as the engine of government , that it 's the president who makes things happen , it 's the president who fixes things , it 's the president who responds to crises and as the crises become more frequent and the crises become more intense so the focus on the president also expands and the Buchanan view is now no longer tenable , the Buchanan view it 's not possible for any president to play the dignified monarch .
5 However , it is not very satisfactory from the point of view of attempts to construct a complete theory because it does not make any predictions of the values of the finite remainders left after making infinite subtractions .
6 Thus from the point of view of journeymen compositors in London and Edinburgh alike , there was an immediate sense in which the whole venture must have appeared socially alien launched in an atmosphere of middle-class philanthropy , pursued by young and perhaps slightly naive women of that class , and seeking to introduce to the trade young girls of perhaps middle-class , perhaps marginal , but not necessarily working-class origin .
7 In both cases , the realization of the infinitive event is " rejected " or " brushed aside " , i.e. viewed from the point of view of factors favouring its non-occurrence rather than its occurrence .
8 When researchers look at schooling from the point of view of girls , it is perhaps not surprising that writers as diverse as Alison Kelly and Valerie Walkerdine can come up with very similar findings .
9 Yet in other chapters the fundamental rationale was presented from the point of view of genes .
10 From the point of view of teachers , then , the category of gender is but one critical perspective of many .
11 Effectively , this means that if the file has been ‘ cut ’ into m sections , the effective packing density of the file — from the point of view of records colliding and causing synonyms — is :
12 That 's the overall and rather special context of this year in , in the year of the youth but every year is an important from the point of view of commodores and clubs and the amount of work that ac goes on on the ground through supporting causes and the effort to recruit membership and it 's in that rather mundane day to day part of R Y A membership that I would like to congratulate you first I think all of you have worked extremely hard and the reports reflect the success achieved and I would particularly highlight the increase in membership , now that obviously has n't been easy and this does require a huge effort of , a consistent effort and it 's not something you can just apply every now and again .
13 The economy will settle down at point A , a position of neoclassical equilibrium from the point of view of firms , though obviously not from the point of view of households , which would prefer to be at point B. Households must therefore revise downwards their planned expenditure on goods in the light of their failure to sell all of their labour services .
14 It 's a bunch of people , Universities , Publishers , erm some funding from Central Government , some from er research councils of various kinds are trying to make a sort of record of current usage of the English language and I think Longmans are intr interested in it for example f from the point of view of dictionaries and stuff like that .
15 The size of the problem from the point of view of governments is widely acknowledged as large and growing .
16 And we do that by trying to see the world from the point of view of Africans .
17 passing the bill over to the welfare authorities , and thereby to other taxpayers , is not acceptable , either in terms of the escalating size of the bill , or , more importantly , from the point of view of individuals learning about how to behave responsibly , and the long-term financial responsibilities that flow from adult behaviour .
18 It is written from the point of view of zoologists although it is biochemical in content .
19 The economy will settle down at point A , a position of neoclassical equilibrium from the point of view of firms , though obviously not from the point of view of households , which would prefer to be at point B. Households must therefore revise downwards their planned expenditure on goods in the light of their failure to sell all of their labour services .
20 Er ninety three was not a good year for recruiting from the point of view of elections as has already been said because we did n't have any elections and therefore er it was n't possible to er to canvas and consequently er we were struggling to recruit new members .
21 From the point of view of consumers of produce grown by slave labour the advantage was going to be equally clear ; supplies of cotton from free-labour sources had begun to enter the British market and were substantially effective in reducing prices .
22 From the point of view of historians this can only mean that training must be broadened and will need to include a heavily element of information technology ( Greenstein 1993 ; Schürer 1993 ) .
23 Xorandor examines the narrative aspect of the novel by exploring the theoretical problems of story-telling from the point of view of children whose minds have been formed by their exposure to computers ; here techniques specific to narrative are shown to be central to even the most logical of sciences .
24 The multiplicity of levels , the over-elaboration of consultative machinery , the inability to get decision-making completed nearer the point of delivery of services and what some describe as unacceptably wasteful use of manpower resources were recurrent themes in most of the areas where we worked .
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