Example sentences of "[verb] known to [art] " in BNC.

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1 The locations of all fire alarm contact points within the building should be made known to every member of the staff who should be instructed by practical demonstration how to activate the alarm system .
2 Then , waving aloft a sheaf of papers , he uttered the famous lie that was to catapult him into the limelight for four years : ‘ I have here in my hand a list of 205 names that were made known to the Secretary of State as being members of the Communist Party and who nevertheless are still working and shaping policy in the State Department . ’
3 As soldiers they wear the uniform given to them and which was made known to the enemy . ’
4 The Securitate was also anxious to make sure that any suffering on the part of a non-conformist at home was made known to the dissident 's contacts in the West .
5 They must be made known to the man in the street , whom they are designed to protect , for they are his birthright .
6 In the UK the AIB keep a very tight control over any CVR read-out since it represents a considerable intrusion on the privacy of the flight crew and , while they insist on using it whenever there is an accident , only the relevant extracts are made known to the public and the official reports contain transcriptions of only those sections which are necessary for a full understanding of the circumstances of the accident .
7 And although , according to the conventions of the time , he acknowledged that ‘ the subject is quite unfit for women to think of ’ , he nevertheless urged a loosening of convention , for ‘ it is absolutely necessary for the ends of justice , and a due regard for outraged humanity , that these things should be made known to the women of England ’ .
8 Unavoidable shortfalls of staffing levels are made known to the immediate manager .
9 The result of each one is made known to the voter before he casts his vote in the next , and the series is prolonged until there emerges at the top of the poll a candidate with an absolute majority .
10 The reason for such a power is that contemporaneous reporting may prejudice either the proceedings in question ( as where the material — although heard in open court — has not been made known to the jury ) or some further proceedings which were pending or imminent at the time .
11 The circumstances in England as to housing and education can be made known to the Australian court as can those circumstances in Australia be made known to the English court without the necessity in either case of calling oral evidence .
12 The circumstances in England as to housing and education can be made known to the Australian court as can those circumstances in Australia be made known to the English court without the necessity in either case of calling oral evidence .
13 fit for the purpose in the general sense , it also means fit for the purpose in any particular sense you had made known to the shop .
14 It never was made known to the brothers .
15 One of the most important of these ‘ eruptions ’ occurred in the latter decades of the nineteenth and early decades of the present century when the fabulous wealth of plants in the Chinese hinterland was made known to the West by French missionaries and British and European hunters .
16 The seller will be in breach of these if all charges and encumbrances ( e.g. liens ) known to him were not made known to the buyer before the contract was made .
17 Further , the buyer must have made known to the seller the particular purpose for which he was buying the goods .
18 It is still unclear from the account given in Macmillan 's memoirs what facts were made known to the Queen when the Prime Minister read to her from his hospital bed a memorandum of advice containing the suggestion that she should invite Lord Home to attempt to form an administration .
19 The substance of the advice must be made known to the offeror 's shareholders .
20 The different types of tenure marked out the leading characteristics of the different forms of land holding known to the law ; but they told us nothing of the nature and incidents of the various interests which those who held by these tenures might have in the land .
21 Those troubles — referred to as the ‘ Irish Rebellion ’ — were overcome only by violent methods used by the ‘ Black and Tans ’ , plus some restless ex-soldiers , known as the ‘ Auxiliaries ’ , and when the facts of those violent methods became known to the British public , they were declared unacceptable — despite the outrages which Sinn Fein had instituted in London and the bombings in Belfast .
22 Stirling and MacDermott were trapped in a cave and rounded up , thus ending the wartime career of the man who became known to the Germans as the ‘ Phantom Major ’ .
23 It was intended to represent the concept of a tram in 2937 , but its unfortunate shape resembled more closely a cottage-loaf , by which it became known to the crews .
24 ( It first became known to the wider world when , five years after Fermat 's death , his son published his notes . )
25 The art of Benin first became known to the West in 1897 when a British military expedition confiscated thousands of works of art from the royal palace and exiled the king , Ovonrramwen .
26 Some of the poems were written down and became known to the outside world before the end of the eighteenth century .
27 Suppose we make known to a child that we have three sticks , all of different length .
28 as if they had known to the minute the time of Rachaela 's arrival .
29 It will frequently happen that information disclosed in confidence is or becomes known to a limited number of people or to a specific section of the public only .
30 Thus , for instance , the implied term that goods supplied under a contract of sale should be fit for the buyer 's purpose ( SGA 1979 , s14(3) ) only applies if the buyer makes known to the seller the purpose for which it wants the goods , relies on the seller 's skill or judgment , and does so reasonably .
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