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

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1 For reasons to be examined below this belief commonly expresses itself in a belief in a defeasible obligation to obey the law .
2 This is partly because , for reasons to be discussed later , we shall be confining ourselves to a certain class of creative person , viz authors : it would therefore be presumptuous of us to extrapolate from our conclusions to other forms of originality .
3 All the work in this approach must go into a persuasive account of what it is for reasons to be conclusive .
4 However , for reasons to be examined presently , he regarded the subsequent proceedings before the House of Lords as leaving the court ‘ powerless ’ to take the matter further .
5 At the close of the hearing before the Judicial Committee Lord Templeman announced that their Lordships would advise that the petitioner should be granted special leave to appeal for reasons to be delivered later .
6 At the conclusion of argument Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. announced that the appeal would be allowed for reasons to be given later .
7 At the close of the hearing before the Judicial Committee Lord Keith of Kinkel announced that their Lordships would advise that the appeal should be dismissed for reasons to be delivered later .
8 announced that the appeal would be dismissed for reasons to be given at a later date .
9 At the conclusion of argument Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. announced that the appeal would be allowed for reasons to be given later .
10 On 13 March 1992 , the court allowed the appeal for reasons to be given later .
11 Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. announced that for reasons to be given later the court would order that W. be transferred to the proposed specialist unit and there receive treatment without her consent .
12 At the conclusion of the argument Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. announced that the appeal would be dismissed for reasons to be given later .
13 At the conclusion of argument Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. announced that the appeal in M. v. P. would be dismissed for reasons to be given later .
14 At the conclusion of the hearing Lord Templeman announced that the appeal would be allowed for reasons to be given later .
15 For reasons to be explained , the original legislation was found to be defective , and was amended in 1976 ( and placed into the legislative context of the Public Order Act 1936 ) , but even after amendment it still gave rise to complaints that it fell short of the aspirations of its promoters in its effects .
16 Such flows approach asymptotically to the self-preserving form , although often very slowly ; for reasons to be seen in Section 21.4 , turbulent flows have a long ‘ memory ’ of upstream conditions .
17 Thereunder in the county court , Ord 20 , r 15 enables notice to be given of intention to give evidence at the trial pursuant to s 2 of the Act whensoever , for reasons to be given in the notice , a witness can not be called : see Ord 20 , rr 14 – 24 and notes thereunder in The County Court Practice .
18 It is common in rent review for reasons to be available only if the parties pay the expert higher fees .
19 And if any words could be found in the Statute which provided that besides paying Income Tax on income people should pay for advantages or emoluments in its wider sense ( such as I think the word " emoluments " here , has not , for reasons to be presently given ) , there is no doubt of Mr Tennant 's possession of a material advantage , which made his salary of higher value to him than if he did not possess it , and upon the hypothesis which I have just indicated , would be taxable accordingly .
20 At high temperatures the configurational entropy will be high and there will be many ways for molecules to be packed , with no one configuration preferred over another .
21 Certainly , employers were not propelled into joining associations since by the time they were required by legislation to bargain with unions US manufacturing was itself organised into sufficiently large company units for employers to be self-sufficient and not to require association bargaining ( Thomson , 1981 ) .
22 There is perhaps a need for employers to be educated to adopt a more pragmatic approach rather than treating cases with an ‘ it 's the principle of the thing ’ attitude .
23 Notts , Lincs and Derbyshire are promoting the Thorntons Challenge with coaching equipment for clubs to be won , whilst Celinet are offering 15 prizes of coaching weeks in a Prize Draw .
24 It may be highly convenient , given the all-pervasive nature of government for activities to be coordinated but even this does not require collective action and there are , indeed , many schemes of government in operation today which lack a feature such as a Cabinet .
25 It effectively halted all plans to transport aid from the port , although the EPLF 's aid arm , the Eritrean Relief Association , asked for shipments to be resumed under its control .
26 The weekly trade newsletter said yesterday that the deal struck by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries last month called for shipments to be cut by about 2 million barrels per day on the February level of about 25.6 million bpd .
27 The usual practice is for casks to be rolled into deep , cool cellars .
28 Thus it is common for policies to be announced but not implemented fully or consistently .
29 It is clear that time will be allowed for improvements to be carried out and only when it is clear that there is no prospect of the business in question being able to operate without causing an odour , which amounts to a statutory nuisance , will the court permit the issue of a writ of sequestration for contempt of court , in committing breaches of the undertaking not to cause a statutory nuisance , thus closing the business down without compensation .
30 The major investigations of the early 1970s were all carried out with the hope of providing some suggestions for improvements to be applied in automated catalogues .
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