Example sentences of "[noun sg] enter into the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You have a very positive standing , my dear young lady , ’ said Mr Stanforth patiently , and perhaps a little patronisingly , too , for this was where money entered into the reckoning , and very young concert artists and music teachers with a living to make must surely react to the alluring image .
2 If an agent enters into the transaction , then for certain types of investment and if the agent does not regularly hold himself out as buying investments , the transaction is excluded .
3 The responsibilities of the head of department and of the college entered into the picture .
4 In reality , the guardians of authority collude in the maintenance of the territory once it has been colonized , and as a result enter into the social framework on the terraces .
5 ‘ ( 2 ) An order under section 238 or 239 may affect the property of , or impose any obligation on , any person whether or not he is the person with whom the company in question entered into the transaction or … the person to whom the preference was given ; … ’
6 Its profundity , he argues , lies in the fact that the unity of marriage enters into the mystery of the unity of ‘ Christ and his church ’ .
7 It was argued that the Tin Council entered into the transactions with third parties as agent acting on behalf of the member States as undisclosed principal .
8 The originality of Nizan 's entire literary output resides in this particular assertion since it brings together the two dominant strands that coexist tensely in Nizan 's intellectual and emotional outlook : ( i ) a brooding sense of anguish and desperation stemming from the gross injustices and inequalities in the world , and ( ii ) an explosive , irrepressible determination to enter into the struggle and combat the forces of oppression in order to gain access to a better life .
9 Thus IT and its record entered into the politics of the workplace .
10 In cases falling within this protected class , equity would hold the security given by the surety to be unenforceable by the creditor if : ( i ) the relationship between the debtor and the surety and the consequent likelihood of influence and reliance was known to the creditor ; and ( ii ) the surety 's consent to the transaction was procured by undue influence or material misrepresentation on the part of the debtor or the surety lacked an adequate understanding of the nature and effect of the transaction ; and ( iii ) the creditor , whether by leaving it to the debtor to deal with the surety or otherwise , had failed to take reasonable steps to try and ensure that the surety entered into the transaction with an adequate understanding of the nature and effect of the transaction and that the surety 's consent to the transaction was a true and informed one .
11 As already mentioned , a refusal to enter into the merits of business judgment has been an important feature of the courts ' attitude towards directors ' negligence , and it is suggested that the basis of this refusal is , to an extent , well-founded .
12 But that is not a view held by those who lack the imagination to enter into the hearts and minds of others , and to do to them as they would be done by ; among them the then Home Secretary and the then Lord Chief Justice .
13 ‘ If the creditor takes adequate steps to inform her and reasonably supposes that she has an adequate comprehension of the obligations she is undertaking and an understanding of the effect of the transaction , the fact that she failed to grasp some material part of the document , or , indeed , the significance of what she was doing , can not , I think , in itself give her an equity to set aside , notwithstanding that at an earlier stage the creditor relied upon her husband to obtain her consent to enter into the obligation of surety .
14 Representations are statements made , almost gratuitously , to induce the Purchaser to enter into the agreement .
15 It goes without saying that if the debtor has employed undue influence or misrepresentation in order to persuade the surety to enter into the transaction and the creditor has knowledge that this has happened , the security will be unenforceable .
16 As our lives are transformed by God , we experience a deepening desire to enter into the heart of God .
17 It is alleged by the fourth plea , that the defendant 's testator never requested the plaintiff to enter into the engagement to marry , or to marry , and that there never was any consideration for the testator 's promise , except what may be collected from the letter itself set out in the declaration .
18 Either you should ask your spouse to enter into the covenant or you could enter into a Joint Deed of Covenant signed by both you and your spouse .
19 Held , allowing the appeal , that , where a creditor knew that security was being taken for the benefit of a debtor from a surety who was likely to be influenced by and to have some degree of reliance on the debtor , the creditor should seek to ensure that unfair advantage was not taken of the surety ; that , if the creditor failed to do so and the surety 's consent to the transaction was procured by the debtor 's undue influence or material misrepresentation or the surety lacked an adequate understanding of the nature and effect of the transaction , the security would be unenforceable ; that the bank knew that the defendants were husband and wife and that the wife was being asked to provide security for the husband 's business and was likely to rely on his judgment , and they should have ensured that she understood the nature and effect of the document which she was asked to sign ; and that , since the bank had failed to do so and had left it to the husband to explain the transaction , so that as a result of the husband 's misrepresentation the wife entered into the charge on the misunderstanding that her liability was limited to £60,000 , they could not enforce the charge against the wife save to the extent of £60,000 ( post , pp. 620C–G , 622F — 623C , D–F , 635G — 636F ) .
20 He said that he thought that the wife entered into the charge of her own free will but that he would probably not have mentioned the question of undue influence to her at the time she executed the charge .
21 Organiser of Edinburgh office said : ‘ Everyone who took part entered into the spirit of the event .
22 But in this sterner , older world , the iron entered into the children 's soul , and many of them had to learn that being alive ought simply to be enough , a gift that must be ultimately paid for .
23 This is evident not only from the fact that the jurisdiction of the Legal Services Ombudsman under sections 21 to 26 of the Act stops at the moment when a complaint enters into the jurisdiction of a disciplinary tribunal : section 22(7) , but also from the fact that in section 27(3) Parliament refers to the process by which a barrister may be disbarred or temporarily suspended from practice by order of an Inn of Court without any hint that it disapproves or wishes to alter in any way the manner in which for centuries the Inns have made orders for disbarment subject to the visitorial jurisdiction of the judges .
24 Attempts to attract candidates without this bias are very difficult to make successfully , especially as much of the self-selection process will have taken place by social conditioning in homes , schools and colleges , long before the Civil Service Commission enters into the reckoning .
25 As will become evident from consideration of the Japanese case , stability in and of capital formation is a crucial variable entering into the organizational calculations from which modes of rationality are constructed .
26 The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Palau in Gibbons v Salii has affirmed that there is no authority to enter into the Compact of Free Association without compliance with the Constitution .
27 L The seller undertakes to make an irrevocable offer to enter into the form of agreement HB5 prescribed by the National House-Building Council .
28 ( ii ) all contracts where the party ( " businessman " ) seeking to rely on the exemption clause entered into the contract in the course of a business ( except those businesses excluded under Sched 1 to the UCTA — basically those which have some other form of statutory regulation such as insurance contracts , contracts for the carriage of goods by sea , or contracts whose subject matter is specialised , and which therefore have a particular body of law governing them , such as real property or intellectual property ) .
29 Accordingly , the shipper enters into the contract of carriage not only on his own behalf , but also as an agent of the consignee .
30 BSL looks imaginal ; one gets a clear insight into the happenings of the story ; it is impossible to understand it unless the receiver of the message enters into the perspective offered by the story-teller .
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