Example sentences of "[be] recognised [conj] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It has been recognised that personal effectiveness in all aspects of life , including work , requires the development of certain broad transferable skills .
2 As for the second , it has long been recognised that successful institutions are distinguished by clear aims .
3 Thirdly , it has long been recognised that written documents produced in the past often have a special quality , which is not possessed by school textbooks or the writings of later historians .
4 For some time , it had been recognised that significant numbers of promising young players were being lost to the game by a lack of a smooth transition from school to senior club .
5 In several cases , important types of behaviour were first investigated in the Lorenz equations although these behaviours have since been recognised as typical of many systems .
6 ‘ Establishment ’ today means very little outside the sphere of the purely formal and ceremonial and the devotion of the time of Parliament to the tedious and time-consuming task of regulating the affairs of the Church of England has long been recognised as anachronistic .
7 In their villages of origin the women had been regarded as contributing less to the economic position of the family than the men , but they had at least been recognised as crucial to the economic life of the community .
8 Amenorrhoea with anovulation has long been recognised as invariable in anorexia nervosa ( decreased libido and low testosterone are the equivalent in the male ) .
9 Mr. Ashworth and Mr. McGregor none the less submit either that , so far as the English common law is concerned , Walker 's case is to be preferred to any inconsistent later decision in any other jurisdiction , or that , as an action by a child for damages for pre-natal injuries had not been recognised as valid in the English courts before 1976 — the enactment of the Act of 1976 — such an action could not now be allowed to develop and the English common law should be taken as being what the latest United Kingdom cases available might have indicated before 1976 .
10 After more than a hundred years of the recognition of industrial picketing as a democratic mechanism the official Code of Practice issued by the Department of Employment says : ‘ There is no legal ‘ right to picket ’ as such but peaceful picketing has long been recognised as lawful . ’
11 Others face the daily reality of human rights violations and need strategies to ensure that their rights are recognised and protected .
12 Potential members must write to the relevant section ( or sections ) , and the BSIA 's governing council has to establish that they are recognised and effective businesses or trades .
13 The yellow and black bands of the wasp are recognised as dangerous by man and beast .
14 The family need to feel that the reasons they can no longer support the relative in the community are recognised as valid .
15 Premature and difficult parturition are associated with a variety of disorders in child development , including some psychological and emotional disorders ; however , it must be recognised that pre-natal factors or others may have dual effect on both labour and child development rather than a causative effect from one to another .
16 It should be recognised that professional journals and magazines etcetera comprise a mix of both general and technical items .
17 It has to be recognised that syllabic consonants are a problem — they are phonologically different from their non-syllabic counterparts .
18 It should also be recognised that non-standard forms are systematic and not haphazard .
19 It has , however , to be recognised that improved safety and greater mobility and accessibility can be conflicting goals ( see opposite ) .
20 It should be recognised that open invitations to all staff to attend can be disruptive to normal line management , and can conflict with the efficient running of service departments where continuous manning is essential .
21 However , the potential danger had to be recognised and continued cooperation with the United States would persuade Washington to be more magnanimous and simultaneously protect Japan .
22 All such rights , powers , liabilities , obligations and restrictions from time to time created or arising by or under the Treaties , and all such remedies and procedures from time to time provided for by or under the Treaties , as in accordance with the Treaties are without further enactment to be given legal effect or used in the United Kingdom shall be recognised and available in law , and be enforced , allowed and followed accordingly : and the expression ‘ enforceable Community right ’ and similar expressions shall be read as referring to one to which this subsection applies .
23 ‘ All such rights , powers , liabilities , obligations and restrictions from time to time created or arising by or under the Treaties , and all such remedies and procedures from time to time provided for by or under the Treaties , as in accordance with the Treaties are without further enactment to be given legal effect or used in the United Kingdom shall be recognised and available in law , and be enforced , allowed and followed accordingly . ’
24 The authors acknowledged that ‘ … new needs will come to be recognised and new legal remedies will come to be developed , ’ but asserted that ‘ … at any time there will be some problems which are clearly perceived by lawyers or lay [ people ] as more ‘ legal ’ than others . ’
25 These concerns must be recognised as specific , which does n't mean that semiotics or Lacanian film theory has no relevance outside the established framework of Anglo-American and European cinema , but rather that their legitimacy should not automatically be assumed or their dominance remain uncontested in the light of developments within feminism at large .
26 Where the education and training they have received is substantially the same as that in the member states to which they wish to move , their qualifications will be recognised as equivalent .
27 If someone has sold the goodwill of his business , some restraint to enable the purchaser to have that which he has bought may be recognised as reasonable .
28 Unpaid work will at last be recognised as valuable .
29 To be a spinster was one thing ; to be a married woman with or without children , or a recently-bereaved widow , all were recognised and acceptable roles in society .
30 As soon as deaf and dumb children were recognised as capable of benefiting from secular and religious teaching , their rescue from degradation and the saving of their souls became objects ranking high in the scale of Victorian values .
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