Example sentences of "[vb base] [art] basis for [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Note was made of the new house group initiated by Bruce Nicole which aim to foster Christian friendship , deepen understanding of the faith and provide the basis for evangelism . |
2 | These provide the basis for exemptions from 5 basic modules shown in Section 4 — 3 in cartography and 1 each in planning and geology . |
3 | The first area is cost behaviour analysis : assumptions with respect to how costs vary with , for example , volume of activity , provide the basis for management decision making over a whole range of issues . |
4 | The ones that have provide the basis for antibiotics , the Pill , dental cement , tranquillisers , heart and ulcer drugs . |
5 | Infrastructure for CIME — the architectures and communications that provide the basis for integration . |
6 | SALMON farmers yesterday rejected a rent review which will reduce site rentals by more than 12 per cent , saying they want the basis for assessments restructured . |
7 | A further implication is that , although standards and routines provide a basis for self-reward in housework , they also make possible less happy outcomes . |
8 | Social action would be linked with adult education in order to give a much wider perspective and provide a basis for life . |
9 | These budgets provide a basis for responsibility accounting . |
10 | Although the financial accounts provide a basis for calculation of profit there is no concern with how or where the profit ( or loss ) arises . |
11 | ( 5 ) They provide a basis for discussion and elucidation at meetings so that they appear less like lectures to convey information and more like collaborative discussion . |
12 | The conception of ideas , their application and the learning process in these countries will be examined in the next three chapters , which in turn provide a basis for comparison with the OECD checklist and with UK experience examined in Chapter Seven . |
13 | However , they provide a basis for research , because they are ‘ not directly accessible to measurement ’ but their ‘ postulated components can be easily assessed if not immediately quantified ’ . |
14 | To understand what is happening it is crucial to see Marxism not in the guise which it claims for itself — namely a scientific method — but as an ideology — a set of beliefs and ideas which help us interpret the world and provide a basis for action — which is a substitute for the religious vacuum left by the decline of Christianity in the West . |
15 | For example , the informal decision making that is a component of ‘ surgical signatures ’ and ‘ practice style ’ can be made explicit by use of clinical judgment analysis and related techniques , which set the basis for variations in diagnostic and therapeutic judgment on a statistically firm footing . |
16 | In actual fact I have seen valuations which are so wide of the mark ( more than 50% in one case ) that one suspects that some valuers know little about the property market and even less about rebuilding costs , which constitute the basis for insurance . |
17 | They form the basis for assessment but are not in themselves assessment objectives … |
18 | Packages form the basis for software control in LIFESPAN . |
19 | Either prose composition or other linguistic exercises form the basis for tutorial work . |
20 | Training may be undergone , qualifications gained , and patterns of work on unemployment set up which form the basis for habits and expectations in adult life . |
21 | Hands-on , value-driven : management is about the implementation of values which are explicit and form the basis for action . |
22 | These degrees form the basis for exemption from the major UK professional accountancy bodies . |
23 | This bibliography and review is mainly concerned with the current project but the following list of books form a basis for study of the history of the Channel Tunnel . |
24 | In this paragraph we have the basis for Brian Way 's philosophy : he is interested in introducing direct experience into education . |
25 | Leaving kin aside ( and many are neighbours ) , Abrams pointed out that many modern neighbours have no basis for interdependence other than proximity . |