Example sentences of "in [noun pl] for the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But this ‘ labour market ’ has resulted in scarcities for the least desirable jobs and regions ( even despite generous wage incentives not enough people want to be coal miners in Siberia ) .
2 But , with the run of his luck , how things stood , in what , so they said , were the best years of his life , he would be in chains for the rest of them .
3 This principle is unlikely to be of great relevance in cases for the protection of business secrets .
4 The UCTA 1977 regulates clauses in any standard terms which : ( a ) exclude or limit liability for breach of the implied terms relating to the goods in contracts for the sale or supply of goods ( ss6 and 7 ) ; ( b ) exclude or limit liability for losses caused by negligence or breach of a duty of care ( s2 ) ; ( c ) exclude or limit liability for other breaches of contract ( s3 ) .
5 There is one proviso : s6 applies to clauses excluding liability for breach of the implied terms in contracts for the sale of goods and applies to all contracts , including those not made in the course of a business .
6 Schedule 2 , for example , lists a number of factors which the court is to take into account in assessing reasonableness under ss6 and 7 — ie in relation to clauses excluding liability for breach of the implied terms in contracts for the supply of goods .
7 Under the SGSA 1982 , in any contract of supply the seller 's or supplier 's duties will normally be strict and excludable only in limited circumstances ( see Chapter 5 ) , whereas , in contracts for the supply of services , the supplier 's duties will be duties of care which will be excludable subject to the reasonableness requirement of UCTA 1977 .
8 Indeed the Law Commission Working Paper No 77 , Implied Terms in Contracts for the Supply of Goods ( 1977 ) , recognised three possible approaches : firstly , the bailor is strictly liable ( Jones v Page ( 1867 ) 15 LT 619 per Kelly CB at p621 ) ; secondly , the goods must be as fit as care and skill can make them ( Hyman v Nye ( 1881 ) 6 QBD 685 per Lindley J at p682 ) ; thirdly , the bailor is liable only if he fails to take reasonable care to ensure that the goods are fit which , as the via media of the two other approaches , was eventually adopted in s9 of SGSA 1982 .
9 It is therefore out of the question to write any but very slow passages in harmonics for the harp .
10 Finally , Abhyankar ( 1992 ) considered hourly returns and innovations in returns for the FT-SE 100 between April 1986 and March 1990 .
11 ‘ There are people on food stamps who will buy a pack of gum with stamps and get the change in coins for the slots . ’
12 Reynes was an acquaintance of the diarist Samuel Pepys , who referred to him as ‘ a willing man , ready to co-operate in plans for the Navy ’ , and ‘ one who understands and loves a play as well as I , and I love him for it ’ .
13 Sterling was given an office at the Department of Trade and Industry , where he advised on industrial policy , and had a big say in plans for the future of broadcasting .
14 The Nunnery Lane convent became involved in plans for the Carmelite convent at Mafeking after the German sisters were approached by the South African Bishop of Kimberley and got in touch with Darlington .
15 Ms Baker forecast cuts in plans for the Festival if the district council did not provide more funds , but said she could not indicate at this stage which productions would go .
16 ORKNEY 'S highest ranked council official was last night facing an inquiry into his dual role as chief executive and finance director , after official criticism of his involvement in plans for the rival ferry service across the Pentland Firth .
17 He compared the cut in taxes for the rich to the bottom 20 per cent which had seen its tax burden rise form 30.7 per cent in 1979 to the present 39.7 per cent .
18 In fact a common complaint over the past decade has been that the high level of data content included in entries for the benefit of cataloguing records has been achieved at the cost of timeliness , and the BNB has certainly lost ground as a selection source for this reason .
19 Edith Durham sought to redress the balance in dispatches for The Times and the Manchester Guardian and through indefatigable lobbying in Whitehall and elsewhere .
20 Surely it helped with the welcomes they received all down the river with locals for ever insisting they come in for meals , to stay , to be guests of honour in parties for the whole town , to be driven round and shown the sights and to have their strange English accents listened to .
21 Perhaps the clearest example of the way in which the arboreal adaptations of the ancestral primates has resulted in opportunities for the evolution of adaptable and intelligent behaviour is the case of the primate hand .
22 If the films are divided simply on the actual risk rating given there is no evidence of differences in relationships for the two types of film — for high risk films the correlation between P(A) and risk , r(22)=0.265 , and for low risk films r(22)=0.166 .
23 Armed members of the the London Metropolitan force have been pulling in drivers for the past two weeks in 20 operations .
24 The Milan Congress not only severely retarded the development of generations of deaf children for whom the Oral Method was totally inappropriate but also caused the loss of hundreds of teaching jobs held by deaf people throughout the world in schools for the deaf .
25 Fine Arts Brass has always been actively involved in educational projects , and as well as coaching students , is involved in a nationwide series of schools concerts under the banner ‘ Legal and General Concert for Children ’ , which has recently bee expanded to include concerts in Schools for the deaf .
26 Their manufacturers are of course trying to place equipment in schools for the purpose of trials but these measures still fall short of the impact need to get serious attention from educational decision makers .
27 Month 3 Paid rent in arrears for the three months amounting to £600 in cash .
28 As a juvenile romanticist Kingston , like his contemporary Ballantyne , used the device of the intrusive author accepted in his time and , besides , the didacticism expected in books for the young , didacticism made easier by the continuity and the extent of time afforded by serial publication in the boys ' magazines of the period .
29 Many of the residents in homes for the elderly have no family , and many that do never see them from one year to the next .
30 The lifestyles experienced by people who live in homes for the elderly are undoubtedly shaped by the nature of the physical setting they occupy as well as the social and organisational regimes which characterise such establishments .
  Next page