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

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1 From the clerical aristocracy , he had been a leading Anglican theologian as Lady Mary Professor of Divinity at Cambridge before his appointment to the prominent public position of Dean of St Pauls in 1911 .
2 The register opens some three weeks before the Declaration of Speyer of May 1199 had been drawn up .
3 Strict rules about the handling of money should be agreed before the event with the emphasis placed on protecting those involved from any possible accusation of mismanagement rather than doubts about the level of honesty of individuals !
4 Descartes , indeed , was with the armies of Maximilian of Bavaria in 1619 at the very beginning of the Thirty Years War when , at Neuberg on the Danube , he had that sequence of dreams which convinced him that his mission was to seek out truth by means of reason .
5 It was recognized in the Carolingian period by the author of the Life of Wulfram of Sens , who thought that the Frisian leader Radbod preferred to be with his ancestors in hell rather than alone in heaven .
6 And he finishes ‘ Hence , in fact , the law of the conditions of existence is the higher law , as it includes , through the inheritance of former adaptations , that of unity of type ’ .
7 ‘ If the objective is to make profit over a period of time , then the organisation pattern that helps to accomplish this conforms to the principle of unity of objective , ; , and
8 Is the concept of unity of life in the New Testament such that the salvation of man involves the liberation of nature ?
9 The object is stillness in movement , a kind of unity of stillness and motion .
10 This path is dictated both by the need for some transmission and by the principle of unity of command , but it is not always the swiftest .
11 However , the criticism that has been directed against the conflict between the principle of specialization ( that efficiency is increased by specialization ) and the principle of unity of command ( that efficiency is enhanced by having members in a determinate hierarchy of authority receive orders from no more than one person ) are relevant to a political view of organizations .
12 This leads to the now widely recognized potential for conflict between line and staff , especially when specialists are sub ordinated to generalists in the interest of unity of command .
13 For smaller firms there will be exciting new opportunities to liaise with colleges whose training facilities are being restructured as realistic working environments for the purpose of assessment of competence .
14 As with every system of national qualifications , it is the quality assurance and control of assessment of NVQs which is vitally important .
15 Although the overall prevalence of moderate to severe dementia for those aged 65 and over in Britain can not be stated with accuracy ( because the several studies conducted in this country took place in different locations , at different times , with different types of sample , and using different measures and methods of assessment of dementia ; see for example Akhtar AM et al , 1973 ; Clarke et al , 1984 and ; 1986 ; Bergmann , 1971 ; Bond & Carstairs , 1982 ; Gruer , 1975 ; Gurland et al , 1983 ; Kay et al , 1964 & 1970 ; Maule et al , 1984 ; Williamson et al , l964 ) , it can be estimated as somewhere between one per cent and seven per cent of those aged 65 and over .
16 The area of assessment of experience and performance is especially pertinent to partnerships .
17 ( 2 ) Difficulty of assessment of damages is an indication in favour of categorising a term as a condition .
18 It is true that over a decade when the senior civil service was moving from being primarily regulatory in outlook to being primarily managerial , there was a lack of research , of assessment of situations before action could be properly planned .
19 Therefore an examination of housing management must consider the following : pointing schemes or other forms of assessment of applicants ; allocation and transfer policies ; building policies and sales policies ( Phillips and Williams 1982a , 1982c ) .
20 If some form of assessment of need for such care is introduced , as seems likely , we shall then have a situation in which old people with private means can choose such care but most will have to prove need .
21 In Scotland a different method of assessment of need has been adopted in response to ‘ a desire to avoid the heavy dependence on statistical method implicit in the regression analysis approach in England ’ ( Midwinter 1984:67 ) .
22 The main impediments to the free flow of people are those placed there to facilitate the free flow of motorised traffic , particularly road crossing barriers , signs embedded in the pavement and steps and ramps to carry the walker over or under the roadway. little seems to have been done in the way of formal schemes of assessment of pedestrian problems or of priorities for maintenance or design .
23 There is no single pattern of assessment of people 's needs .
24 Essentially , the position which Anselm established lasted till 1920 , despite the heroic struggle of Gerald of Wales in the early thirteenth century to establish an archbishopric at St Davids .
25 If the advantages of decentralization of decision making are to be preserved , firms must be able to operate within a set of rules for competition that enable them to identify what strategies are likely to attract scrutiny , and what strategies they can pursue without hindrance .
26 The issue of decentralization of services to local bases in the community has inevitably brought with it questions of the decentralization of budgets .
27 The second concerned the scale of decentralization of people and industry from a congested centre .
28 The gentlest way of doing this is to use the effect of the deprivation of something desired , and where the training of children is concerned , that something need be nothing other than the temporary withholding of manifestations of love .
29 The expedient of the withholding of manifestations of love from the very young child amounts to the instilling of the first tiny measure of fear , and fear , used in conjunction with reward provides the fundamental tools which the adult population must have if it is to maintain steady progress towards the civilisation it desires .
30 The power of the conscience can be built up from very early childhood by nothing more harmful than the temporary withholding of manifestations of love .
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