Example sentences of "[conj] [prep] [art] [noun pl] [Wh det] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ But if one party has the power of saying to the other , ‘ that which you require shall not be done except upon the conditions which I choose to impose , ’ no person can contend that they stand upon any thing like an equal footing .
2 But if one party has the power of saying to the other , ‘ that which you require shall not be done except upon the conditions which I choose to impose , ’ no person can contend that they stand upon any thing like an equal footing .
3 But if one party has the power of saying to the other , ‘ that which you require shall not be done except upon the conditions which I choose to impose , ’ no person can contend that they stand upon any thing like an equal footing .
4 My Lords , I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speeches of my noble and learned friends , Lord Keith of Kinkel and Lord Browne-Wilkinson , and for the reasons which they give I agree that the appeal should be allowed and the questions answered in the way in which my noble and learned friend , Lord Keith of Kinkel , proposes .
5 I agree with it , and for the reasons which he gives I , too , would dismiss both appeals .
6 I agree with it , and for the reasons which he gives I , too , would allow the appeal .
7 In my judgment and for the reasons which I have given , the challenge based upon the implication of a requirement of natural justice must fail .
8 Great Britain still had great industrial resources : there were specialized skills available among her workers , she still had huge supplies of her excellent coal , she had opened up new markets as fast as she had been pursued into her old ones by her competitors , and she had an enormous income from investments overseas and from the services which she supplied — in transport , banking and insurance , for example — to the rest of the world .
9 Seek information from local industry and from the services which you use to demonstrate that risk to the public has been assessed properly , and that an adequate risk management programme is in place .
10 On the questionnaire , we exhaustively listed the kinds of changes that had occurred in the case study schools and in the schools which we had earlier visited , and asked teachers whether any of these had occurred in their school .
11 The recent Toyne Report ‘ Environmental Responsibility , An Agenda for Further and Higher Education ’ , commissioned by the DoE and the Welsh Office states , ‘ Everybody has some scope for doing his or her job in a more environmentally responsible way , and needs to understand the importance of this … but may well need more than this , either because they have been given specific responsibilities within their organisation , or simply because their organisation 's environmental impact is heavily dependent on the way they carry out their day-to-day tasks , and on the decisions which they have to take . ’
12 Two centuries later , the Enlightenment returns : but not at all as a way for the West to take cognizance of its present possibilities and of the liberties to which it can have access , but as a way of interrogating it on its limits and on the powers which it has abused .
13 These and many other factors are of great importance to practising physicians , but to do justice to them and to the controversies which they provoked is beyond the purpose of this book .
14 He would talk not only of their vocation to the ministry but of the books which they were reading and the circumstances of their family .
15 Morgan was not interested in the terms for themselves but in the principles which they seemed to reveal when they were put together .
16 This means that the accuracy of our picture of God is not shown in the orthodoxy of our creeds or testimonies but in the truths which we assume and count on in the concrete situation ; those moments when the heat is on , the chips are down and reality seems to be breathing down our necks .
17 They simply have not got the money , and they are frightened to put the heating on and to keep their homes warm because of the bills which they know they will not be able to pay .
18 Because of that view and because of the principals which we as an organisation espouse we chose to challenge the position that the Home Secretary had adopted and raised , we believe , the debate in the media and in the parliamentary setting of what should be provided to meet the er needs of young people .
19 This is partly because of the purposes which it now serves ; it is the expected language in the education system , in other social institutions ( such as the courts and business ) and in almost all published writing , and it has also spread far beyond its historical base in Britain and is used as an international language in many parts of the world .
20 I mean are you saying Mr in actual fact if we take the reverse of what you what you said that the the M A F F establishment itself would would object to development being within a certain distance of its premises because of the requirements which they have in order to carry on their operations ?
21 Sir , I feel that regard should be had by you to the practicalities of the situation as well as to the submissions which I have made , in coming to your decision .
22 The Act also contains guidance for the courts as to the factors which they should take into account in deciding whether any of the statutory exceptions to the presumption in favour of bail apply in a particular case .
23 The origins of Cognitive–Behaviour therapy may be traced back to the philosopher Epictetus , who in the first century AD wrote ‘ People are disturbed not so much by events as by the views which they take of them ’ .
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