Example sentences of "pass [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Some of the cost can be borne by the management company and passed on to the owners through the maintenance charge , but the proportion relating to the construction and pre-sales periods will have to be borne by ourselves as developers .
2 Not exactly the sort of thought you wanted to pass on to the police at a time when two boys ' bodies had been found .
3 Was it properly refereed or passed through at the urgings of the editor ?
4 The reason for the preserving and passing on of the traditions in this way was that they were used primarily by the early Church in its teaching of the community .
5 In other words , controlling as he did the nominations to all learned appointments in whichever of the areas he was then kazasker , he would urge young scholars to enter the relative dead end of the career of kasabat kadi and thereby prevent them from passing up through the ranks of medreses to become candidates for mevleviyets and thus rivals to his own position .
6 In the thirteenth century the decoration of manuscripts was passing out of the hands of the religious houses to artists grouped together within the towns and working for patrons both lay and ecclesiastical .
7 By this process control passes out of the hands of the inefficient management team to those who are able to utilise the company 's assets at a level closer to their true potential .
8 Currents pass in through the sides of the shell , over the ciliated lophophore where the food is extracted , and then out through the depression in the margin of the valves .
9 There must be adequate and timely arrangements for the operating experience on other PWR plants to be collected , analysed and passed back to the operators with any necessary retraining .
10 ‘ She passed out in the wings after her last exit . ’
11 Over 100 Dale Farm milkmen have also been issued with incident report cards which they can pass on to the police through their depot manager .
12 In other words ‘ the Russian revolution will create conditions in which power can pass in to the hands of the workers … before the politicians of bourgeois liberalism get the chance to display to the full their talent for governing ’ .
13 Initially , it seemed that control of surveyors ' education would pass out of the hands of the membership of the Institution and into those of the academics .
14 If the last is the case then those profits will either be retained in the company and reinvested , or they will be passed on to the shareholders as increased dividends .
15 When the messages were decoded they emerged as apparently meaningless blocks of letters , and these were passed on to the linguists in Hut 3 who turned them into intelligible German .
16 Yet , not all this increase in bulk costs was passed on to the consumers in retail tariffs .
17 Nutrients from the sap are passed on to the ants in the mealybugs ' excrement .
18 Although the wool producers seem to have borne part of the tax costs , the substantial increase in cloth production during the war is most easily explicable if a large part of the wool tax was passed on by the exporters to the foreign buyers , while the English cloth manufacturers were able to undercut their Continental rivals ( 88 , pp.39–40 ) .
19 She needed guts to face always being passed over by the boys for her gorgeous sister Gloria .
20 This concept has played the leading role in the development of the modern law but the question of definition has tended to be passed over in the cases with little analysis .
21 The fish is then passed up into the mouths of the feeding individuals , and the ingested food is shared among all the other ( non-feeding ) members of the colony through a series of cavities .
22 The cheques are then passed back to the branches on whose accounts they are drawn .
23 Melchet Forest in Wiltshire finally passed out of the hands of the Crown in 1614 , when it was leased to Sir Lawrence Hyde , and in the same year John Waller and Thomas Purcell received a grant of Pamber Forest in Hampshire , ‘ consisting of the soil only , the woods being sold away and the deer gone ’ .
24 The manor passed out of the hands of the Archbishop and into the hands of the Crown in 1545 .
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