Example sentences of "[conj] [adv] [pron] [vb -s] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For the first time the Bill gives galleries powers of disposal , subject to certain conditions — or rather it gives such powers to the Tate and the national portrait gallery , but not to the Wallace collection or the national gallery .
2 A creditor whose claim includes an element of VAT can either prove for the whole amount of the claim ( and pay to HM Customs and Excise the VAT element irrespective of whether or not he receives any dividend ) or prove for the amount of his claim net of VAT and reclaim the VAT under the Value Added Tax ( Bad Debt Relief ) Regulations 1978 .
3 This includes an unmarried father whether or not he has parental responsibility .
4 Becker hints at the inside model when he concludes , not without generating some confusion , that ‘ whether a given act is deviant or not depends in part on the nature of the act ( that is , whether or not it violates some rule ) and in part on what other people do about it ’ .
5 Whether or not it has any prospect of success this court is in no position to determine , but while it remains alive we do not consider that the judgment of this court can be described as final within the meaning of rule 2 ( a ) .
6 This includes knowing what time of day to take it , how long you should continue taking it ( just until you feel better or until the end of the full course ? ) , whether or not it has any side-effects ( such as drowsiness ) , and whether or not it should not be taken in conjunction with certain foods or alcohol .
7 The internationally respected journal Index on Censorship devoted the whole of its September 1988 issue to the question of liberty in Britain , because , as its opening article entitled ‘ Why Britain ? ’ put it , ‘ if freedom is diminished in the United Kingdom , where historically it has deep roots , it is potentially diminished everywhere ’ .
8 At high levels of idiosyncratic skill ( flair see p. 245 ) analysis is particularly difficult because the practitioner may have little conscious awareness of how or why he achieves unusual success .
9 It was one of those events which at a crucial stage in one 's development arrive to challenge and stretch one to the limit of one 's ability and beyond , so that thereafter one has new standards by which to judge oneself .
10 This would involve claiming that whenever one rejects practical advice by repudiating the presumed end , in the words ‘ But I do n't want that ! ’ , one is declaring ‘ I do n't recognize any imperative to do that ’ .
11 It is important not to be inflexible when looking at housing options , although sometimes it seems that dogma is of overriding importance to staff and , indeed , more important than finding solutions which suit individuals .
12 Technologically and economically it requires more explaining than is now possible , not least because of the loss or destruction or records , to say nothing of not keeping them at all .
13 I mean it 's you know , it 's just to people in the film industry and obviously it has little interest reading it
14 And once she utters those words we 've to deal with it like rape , the whole procedure , medical examination , and questioning .
15 The justification advanced — and clearly it has some validity — is that medical opinion is divided , or , more important , that the legal concept is of a different nature from the medical , involving considerations other than the mere question of scientific evidence , such as notions of responsibility or the common good .
16 He has just hit his best form and now he gets this injury .
17 The family living room is filled with bulkly materials which create dust and refuse , and often it stores dangerous glues and solvents and sharp instruments hwich have to be guarded from the children .
18 My right hon. Friend the Member for Leeds , East ( Mr. Healey ) was one of the main authors of that doctrine in the 1960s and today it enjoys some credibility due to the efforts of the present Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Defence , who has argued clearly for the theory of flexible response in a series of public lectures and articles .
19 And then somebody puts another piece of wire in , I 'm not saying how much resistance it is , but somebody puts another piece of wire .
20 and we 'd left it , and not bothered and then he says one day I might as well sling this out it 's no good is it ?
21 And then he uses same tea bag again .
22 Plenty of dual instruction is needed to be safe , and then it requires constant practice on high approaches to be able to sideslip effectively .
23 surplus there is , and then it redistributes that surplus and given that the , the , the priority is industrialization most if not all of that surplus is going to go to the industrial sector .
24 And then it fills one side up then .
25 yes , and then it says ordinary management services
26 There 's er a collar and a what they call a which is a protein tube and then it has various spikes at the end that make it stick on to the outside of the bacteria .
27 It forms when chlorine-containing compounds such as CFCs break down in the stratosphere and then it triggers photochemical chain reactions that can destroy as many as 100000 molecules of ozone per molecule of ClO .
28 It 's , tonight it 's , think of these as a sort of temperature numbers that , try , try these , it starts at plus three tonight and then it drops five degrees , plus three and it drops five degrees , what does it come to ?
29 and then it winds another piece of paper in and starts printing again
30 In most areas , only bulls with small ivory survive , a fact which bodes ill , genetically speaking , for the future of the species — if indeed it has any future in the wild at all .
  Next page