Example sentences of "brought forward " in BNC.

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1 When both the Minister for Justice , General McEoin , and the Attorney General , Mr Charles Casey , made it clear that they considered the legislation inopportune , pressure for an explanation eventually brought forward a response from Mr Casey .
2 Also in an ideal calendar , the Grand Slam Cup should be brought forward to the end of October , 4–5 weeks after the US Open , which would not only give the players a brief chance to relax but then to prepare for the ‘ tour finale ’ on an indoor surface .
3 The regulations originally were intended to come into effect on 11 September 1991 , but the commencement date was brought forward to 31 August .
4 The congress has been brought forward by a year , in what is being interpreted as a victory for the leader of the reformist wing of the party , Imre Pozsgay .
5 Sheffield Eagles , still homeless after being banned from the Owlerton Stadium , have brought forward their home match against Leeds from 29 October to Wednesday , 25 October , to enable it to take place at Wakefield .
6 As Mason , the British heavyweight champion , has been brought forward along similar lines , his career nourished mainly by opponents who showed little inclination to remain upright , it should be clear that Biggs is thought to represent an ideal opportunity for advancement .
7 The game has been brought forward from 5 November because Headingley has been chosen to stage the John Smiths Yorkshire Cup final on that date .
8 MICHAEL WATSON 'S World Boxing Association world middleweight title challenge against the Jamaican , Mike McCallum , has been brought forward to 29 November and switched to Alexandra Palace .
9 But , he added , appraisal had great potential to improve standards , and regulations requiring local authorities to introduce it would be brought forward eventually .
10 The announcement , hastily brought forward from the middle of the month , was designed to forestall other lenders from following the Yorkshire Building Society , which lifted its rate to 15 per cent at the weekend .
11 ‘ The Government considers that legislation should be brought forward when a suitable opportunity arises , ’ he said .
12 An extra £5 million would be brought forward from next year to offset the extra cost , but it would not be made up next year .
13 He suggested that a start to answering these questions should be made at a 35-nation European summit , under the auspices of the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe , which the Soviet Union has suggested be brought forward towards the end of next year .
14 The two leaders also agreed that visa and currency exchange-free travel to East Germany for West Germans and West Berliners , planned to come into force next January , would be brought forward to December 24 .
15 Increased fines for dropping litter , and regulations requiring local authorities and landowners keep their premises free from litter would be brought forward .
16 The event has been brought forward a year from 1991 and moved also from France to West Germany .
17 His colleague , Lord Beloff , asked why the Government had brought forward a bill without support in either House for a scheme the vice-chancellors had repeatedly told them was impossible .
18 We therefore believe that greater reliance on the fast reactor is a necessary consequence of such restrictions and that the timescale for the large scale introduction of fast reactors may need to be brought forward .
19 Iain Macleod 's acceleration of the withdrawal timetables was being implemented : the independence of Tanganyika was brought forward from 1970 to December 1961 ; Uganda 's from 1973 to October 1962 ; Kenya 's from 1975 to December 1963 .
20 Some people think the parliamentary election should be brought forward from 1993 , to give the government legitimacy and to open the way for a new president — Mr Lech Walesa ? — in place of General Jaruzelski .
21 Then he began : ‘ My friends , you have heard all the arguments that have been brought forward to prove the new world-view .
22 At the other end of the spectrum family events such as weddings may be brought forward because the dying person says they want to live to see it .
23 Now they have brought forward a plan which is that they should lend me sufficient money to rent another house in which Mr Landor is to have the first floor , comprising three rooms , a book closet , and a terrace , and I am to reside on the ground floor and care for him receiving £30 a year for my trouble .
24 Grievances relating to the forests therefore figured prominently in the ‘ Petitions of the Barons ’ brought forward at the Parliament of Oxford in June 1258 .
25 Mrs Haemaelaeinen , whose appointment was brought forward from July after her predecessor quarrelled with the government and resigned during the weekend , said plans to cut public spending by 10 billion markka ( £1.3 billion ) and a new division of responsibilities between the government and the central bank , would help stabilise the currency .
26 Miller 's Vinca rosea ( now Catharanthus roseus ) had been brought forward : ‘ as this plant is a great novelty in Europe … the Figure of the Plant has not yet been seen by any living person ’ and of Gardenia capense , called by him Jasminium , he wrote , ‘ Could we have procured a good drawing in proper time it would have been in its proper place , but as this is so curious and being an undescribed plant , we hope our purchasers will not be displeased with insertion here . ’
27 Golf 's popularity was putting pressure on the course because more local people played , and earlier in the day than previously , so the Artisans ' starting time was brought forward to ‘ no later than 8.30 a.m. ’ ( 30 years before it was 9.30 a.m . ) .
28 Almost the last act of the decade was the decision to wind up the Artisans , originally planned to be by December 1984 ; although in 1980 it was brought forward to 1981 .
29 This is a very small sample of labouring class poetry in the eighteenth century , for as A. J. Sambrook observes with just a little exaggeration : ‘ … since the discovery in 1730 of Stephen Duck … hardly a year had passed without some peasant poet being brought forward and hailed as a ‘ natural genius ’ . ’
30 The onset of war , however , not only brought forward other anxieties relating to working-class youth , in particular the rising rate of juvenile crime , but also , and not unrelated , exaggerated fears about the consequences of high wages and precocious independence .
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