Example sentences of "[noun] be [verb] by the [noun] " in BNC.

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31 Bureaucrats — or potential bureaucrats — would in some cases be controlled by the need to compete for contracts , in others by the need to compete for ‘ clients ’ ( or pupils ) .
32 A petition , when ready , will of course be lodged by the agent ; they are frequently printed , but can certainly be deposited in typescript or duplicated form .
33 The possibilities both of prediction and of evaluation will of course be limited by the observer 's own range of awareness .
34 The additional cost of the borehole pumps and storage tanks will of course be borne by the developer .
35 The base from which the Census SAS/LBS for 1991 were compiled is thus different from 1981 ; the SARs will not include imputed households , but will of course be affected by the undercount .
36 When the whole of the charge secured by that entry is to be repaid the form of withdrawal endorsed on the back of the lender 's official notice of deposit is completed and handed over ; when the notice of deposit relates to other property as well as that being sold , and so will continue in respect of that other property after completion , the notice of deposit must of course be retained by the lender .
37 Ordered , That the said Journal and Index be printed by the appointment and under the direction of Sir Clifford John Boulton , KCB , the Clerk of this House .
38 The following year when Eisenhower first proposed a ban on the use of outer space for military purposes the Soviet leadership insisted that such a measure be accompanied by the removal of foreign military bases from Europe , the Middle East and North Africa .
39 It does seem an anachronism that the Australian government could in theory be sacked by the Queen in London , particularly as both countries are devoting much greater attention to their regional interests .
40 It is time that Mr Major let British interest rates be fixed by the needs of our low-inflation recessionary economy , not by the Germans ' need to fight the rising inflation caused by their economic mismanagement .
41 Only if the issue , whether the accused is really the thief or the handler is live , need the phrase be proved by the prosecution : see Cash [ 1985 ] QB 801 ( CA ) , approving Griffiths ( 1974 ) 60 Cr App R 14 ( CA ) , and A-G of Hong Kong v Yip Kai-foon [ 1988 ] AC 642 ( PC ) .
42 The BG-BASE reference manual is no substitute for a users ’ guide to our particular application , and it is essential that such a guide be written by the end of 1993 at the latest .
43 The bill will receive a third reading , and once passed by the Commons will be debated by the Lords in much the same way .
44 Consequently too little of a public good will be produced by the market .
45 How might the behaviour and attitudes of the pupils be affected by the organization of the school and the teachers ' attitudes and expectations ?
46 Apparently he suggested that the common Unix brand and the common interface specification be owned by the industry as represented by Unix International Inc .
47 Apparently he suggested that the common Unix brand and the common interface specification be owned by the industry as represented by Unix International .
48 For the present , let us note that in Marx 's view of history as a dialectical process , just as in a society whose mode of production was feudal , with its ‘ contradictions ’ , a ruling class of landowners had been overthrown by an exploited peasantry , so too in a society whose mode was bourgeois would the capitalists be overthrown by the proletariat .
49 He must on no account be seen by the neighbours .
50 The judge erred in law in holding that in mortgage proceedings if a mortgagee failed to seek an order for costs then the mortgagor could apply for the costs to be taxed on an appropriate basis ; if no order was made the mortgagor could require that the costs of the mortgage proceedings be referred by the master taking the account to the taxing master for taxation pursuant to R.S.C. , Ord. 62 , r. 24 ; ( 3 ) that a provision in the mortgage deed providing expressly or by implication the basis on which costs were to be taxed was not then binding on the court and the judge also erred when he held that in mortgage proceedings a provision entitling the mortgagee to an indemnity against all costs , charges and expenses was void so far as it purports to exclude the jurisdiction of the court under section 51 of the Supreme Court Act 1981 .
51 But will its preeminence be shadowed by the reunification of Germany and of Europe , and by the prospect of Berlin as a gargantuan cultural metropolis ?
52 Provided national law would confer protection upon the employees of such an employer , then the transaction would in principle be covered by the Directive .
53 The Chief Secretary then sought to imply that the Government might in some way be forced by the EC to extend the coverage of VAT .
54 The Act includes a " citizen-suit " provision , under which individuals can challenge violations of the law , providing they can demonstrate that they will in some way be harmed by the violation .
55 That will no doubt be done by the press , clearly bored at not having had a good scandal to get its teeth into for all of two months .
56 Unfortunately , there is a price to pay for everything and , under this Government , that price is measured by what we call the poll tax and will soon no doubt be measured by the council tax .
57 Would the member be covered by the fact that he had followed the exchange 's rules ?
58 Similar provisions are made for CTT with this difference , that in calculating the value of the ‘ slice ‘ the property is to be deemed to produce income a such a rate as may from time to time be prescribed by the Treasury with the proviso that the value of the ’ slice ’ as so ascertained is never to exceed the value of the whole property .
59 It is to publish information as to the discharge of its functions , supply information to the Lord Chancellor as and when required , make annual reports , and ‘ have regard , in discharging its functions , to such guidance as may from time to time be given by the Lord Chancellor . ’
60 Various indices now exist and it may be that the choice of index should to some extent be determined by the nature of the property .
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