Example sentences of "[pron] [vb -s] that [subord] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Everyone agrees that if the service is to be seamless there are enormous benefits in having people providing care across the health-social care boundary — ‘ one person providing bathing , bandaging , and hoovering ’ — and not bothering about who pays .
2 In particular , Shultz and Wells ( 1985 ) propose a matching rule which specifies that if the result matches the intention , then the result was intended .
3 But there is nothing anywhere in the P P G twelve in particular which says that before a district can have policy in their local plan there must be a lead policy in the structure plan .
4 Second , although there is no reason to expect any model to be other than linear and additive , there is an argument , presented by Flowerdew ( 1988 ) , which says that since the response variable compromises count data , the appropriate regression model should combine a Poisson error distribution with an identity link function ( see Aitkin et al. 1989 ; 217 ) .
5 It seems to me there is a tenable argument which says that whether the road the relief road is north or south of Knaresborough , is a strategic matter .
6 Other examples of rules which may not be congruent with the requirements of fiduciary law are SIB Core Rule 2 , which states that where a firm has a material interest it must not knowingly act for the customer unless it takes steps to ensure his " fair treatment " ( this may not be sufficient under fiduciary law ) , and SIB Core Rule 25 which in conjunction with SFA Conduct of Business Rule 5 — 36(2) permits " front running " .
7 Mr Chapman was prosecuted under s 37 of the 1974 Act , which states that where an offence under any of the relevant statutory provisions committed by a corporate body is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of , or to have been attributable to any neglect on the part of , any director , manager , secretary , or similar officer , or a person who was purporting to act in any such capacity , he , as well as the corporate body , shall be guilty of that offence .
8 In the language of political philosophy , power is deemed to be a concept that is ‘ essentially contested ’ which means that although the concept has featured prominently in political philosophy over the centuries and is now a major concern of organisation theorists we are still left with disputes over its meaning .
9 first , the definition of infanticide is limited to the killing of the child most recently born , which means that when a mother in a disturbed state kills both her last-born child and another slightly older child , the one killing is infanticide and the other may be murder , whereas the defendant 's culpability is surely the same in both cases .
10 Additionally , these long leases can be assigned , which means that if the lessee wishes to sell the business after two years or more , then often a considerable lump sum premium can be obtained which reflects the lessee 's investment and related goodwill .
11 It follows from the foregoing that a condition of the type at issue in the main proceedings , which stipulates that where a vessel is owned or chartered by natural persons they must be of a particular nationality , and where it is owned or chartered by a company the shareholders and directors must be of that nationality , is contrary to article 52 of the E.E.C .
12 The matter is now governed by section 6 of the Torts ( Interference with Goods ) Act 1977 which provides that if the improver acted in the mistaken but honest belief that he had a good title , an allowance is to be made for the extent to which the value of the goods at the time at which it falls to be assessed , is attributable to the improvement .
13 Suffering is used in this sense in s1 of the Administration of Justice Act 1982 which provides that where a plaintiff 's expectation of life has been reduced the court in awarding damages for pain and suffering shall take into account the suffering caused or likely to be caused by awareness that his expectation of life has been so reduced .
14 A linear temperature dependence for χ 1 is also predicted of the general form , which suggests that as the temperature increases the solvating power of the liquid should increase .
15 She adds that while the CHA is not presently advocating de-insurance of any specific service , a practical example is the hotel cost of hospital stays .
16 Eliot , who says that while the reader works at subduing the difficulty of a poem , the poem is doing its emotional work on him .
17 She recognises that after the furore of two years ago any return would have to be ‘ graded ’ .
18 The way this works has been once more illuminated by Mr Frye , who notes that though the line from Charles Kingsley 's ballad about the ‘ cruel , crawling foam ’ ( which swallows a girl drowned by accident ) could be censured by rationalistic critics as the ‘ pathetic fallacy ’ — thinking nature is alive — what the phrase actually does is to let realism aspire for a second to higher modes , to give to the drowned Mary ‘ a faint coloring of the myth of Andromeda ’ .
19 She argues that while the research provides clues about the types of preventive programmes that may be of help we also know what a complex problem child abuse is : The implication seems clear .
20 She suggests that although the stretching of categories : ‘ is performed in the name of vanguard aesthetics — the ideology of the new — its covert message is historicism .
21 One assumes that where the subject of death is touched on , the actual time given to it will be relatively short .
22 In such models one finds that as the universe expands , any matter or radiation in it gets cooler .
23 No one denies that if the story became available it would be seized but , while an autobiography would have been an automatic bestseller at the time of his release , would it still be wonderful if one or five years ' time ?
24 ‘ The principle that a defendant must take the plaintiff as he finds him involves that if a wrongdoer ought reasonably to foresee that as a result of his wrongful act the victim might require medical treatment he is , subject to the principle of novus actus interveniens , liable for the consequences of the treatment applied although he could not reasonably foresee those consequences or that they could be serious . ’
25 Discussing a book on Dostoevsky , he remarks that while the author has much of interest to say about The Idiot ‘ she does not quite persuade one that it comes off , indeed she does not really try , because like many scholars today she is more concerned with showing how the thing works than with judging if it works well . ’
26 He remarks that when the state of our minds does not appear to change we do not notice that time has elapsed .
27 We have already noticed the sense in which conventionalism is bilateral : it insists that if no decision of some case can be found within the explicit extension of a legal convention one way or the other , the judge is obliged to make new law as best he can .
28 Indeed , he thinks that whereas the master fails to gain a proper sense of himself from the slave , because the slave merely carries out his ( the master 's ) will , the slave does gain a certain degree of self-consciousness by means of the work he performs for the master .
29 Speaking of the activities of elementary particle physicists , he writes that whereas the activity appears essential as long as we believe in the independent existence of fundamental laws that we can still hope to know better , it loses practically its whole motivation as soon as we believe that the sole objective of the scientists is to make their impressions mutually consistent .
30 He writes that while the state plan of the day was ‘ coming apart at the seams ’ , Khrushchev was toying with radical reform that would reshape the Stalinist economy , and pondering sweeping changes in the constitution of 1936 .
  Next page