Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [vb mod] [verb] [det] the " in BNC.

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1 Not only will you have to bend too much ( putting an enormous strain on your back ) , the mattress will absorb all the necessary pressure intended for your partner 's body .
2 ‘ The campus looks neat , and I am proud of the new buildings , but as one looks down Richmond Road , the image is of derelict mills — I hope one day that the University will own all the derelict land and that we will expand our campus on to it . ’
3 The user must consider all the possibilities .
4 The user must enter all the other details to fill in the history and description of the package .
5 The one who is ‘ playing ’ the role of the non-Christian should ask all the usual questions that your friends may ask , and the one who is being the Christian should attempt to answer .
6 The level of detail and complexity of the plan should match both the complexity of the works , the level of control required and the contractors ability to understand and maintain the plan .
7 ‘ So out of the window will fly all the ideals Sarah Chester Fabrics has stood for ? ’
8 So that literally means the developer will pay all the teachers that might be in a school , pay all the people to sweep the roads and a a and and everything else .
9 The developer will use all the senses — seeing , hearing and smelling -when assessing the environment .
10 But what in re in practical terms if the consultant can do all the estimating in-house , with a very limited resource .
11 Because there is this impasse between what the officers wanted to do and what the residents find acceptable the only way I can get this matter resolved is for the council to refer the possible closure to the committee so that the committee can consider all the facts er in the light of the advice of the officers erm and I therefore beg to move this .
12 The seller will have all the usual seller 's remedies .
13 A standard form of agreement is set out in Appendix I. The essential elements of a confidentiality agreement are an acknowledgment by the purchaser that : ( a ) the existence of the negotiations and all information received relating to the vendor 's business is confidential ; ( b ) the purchaser will maintain the confidentiality and ensure that all persons receiving the information maintain the confidentiality ; ( c ) the purchaser will only use information for assessing its acquisition of the business and for no other purpose ; ( d ) the purchaser will return all the information and either return or destroy all copies if the transaction does not complete .
14 The war will leave all the multiple tensions of the region just where they were before , or worse .
15 Under Ord 18 , r8 the plaintiff must plead both the claim for provisional damages and the facts relied on to support it as specified by s32A of the Supreme Court Act 1981 .
16 Do n't give up hope yet ; after all , the delay may mean all the difference between a wedding — or a funeral !
17 The usage must fulfil all the normal tests of a custom and it will become part of the contract so long as it is reconcilable with the terms of the contract ( Peter Darlington Partners Ltd v Gosho Co Ltd [ 1964 ] 1 LLoyd 's Rep 149 ) .
18 If the materials are properly prepared and used , the procedure can have all the advantages of an experimental study .
19 Crowds of women and children ringed the convoy with burning bales of hay and told the soldiers the convoy should take all the wounded or none .
20 One point which has been decided is that an odour need not be prejudicial to health to amount to a nuisance , rather in deciding the question the court will consider all the circumstances including the character of the locality in which the plaintiff is living , the nature , intensity and frequency of the odour , the time and effects of its commission .
21 In each of the five situations the court will consider all the circumstances and decide whether the parties in fact intended that a partnership be brought about .
22 Even in the case of a regular wage-earner or salaried employee , there might be complications ; for example , the plaintiff might claim that he would have been promoted to a more remunerative post ( in which case the court must assess his prospects of promotion and award damages accordingly ) or the defendant may claim that the plaintiff 's employer had suffered severe business setbacks that necessitated redundancies and that the plaintiff would have lost his employment ( in which case the court must consider all the circumstances and award as damages what it estimates to have been the plaintiff 's net loss ) .
23 The pitch will be moved 15 feet closer to the existing stand and the dimensions increased so that the ground will meet all the requirements needed to stage international fixtures .
24 As long as the specimen has an accessible surface that is greater than about 2 cm in diameter and is unattacked by a suitable coupling liquid , the method will yield all the moduli together with Poisson 's ratio in five minutes plus the time taken to do the required calculations .
25 They suit the range to very direct methods of sketching and drawing , where varying the contact between the pastel and the paper can provide all the necessary elements of technique .
26 The candidate will spend most the campaign making speeches throughout the constituency , not infrequently at thinly attended meetings , and canvassing door to door where possible .
27 A derrick winch , even a coffee-grinder in the galley might provide all the impulse it requires . ’
28 If the radio is off but the mains still connected to the transformer then the Zener must absorb all the output current .
29 They stated that the government would spend half the revenues raised to pay debts and would cut expenditure in 1993 , including axing projects which did not generate jobs .
30 Centres like this is a vital alternative to prison and the Government must give all the financial backing that 's possible .
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