Example sentences of "[prep] [noun] to demand " in BNC.

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1 . What I want to come on to now is just to talk about nonlinearity , and still with reference to demand elasticities .
2 He argues that this service is much more appropriately organized at local level , where demand for the theatre of books can be stimulated , whilst the information function operates essentially at national level , in response to demand .
3 The Pre-Retirement Association ( address on page 155 ) runs day or weekend courses for the employees of large companies ; and as the PRA has a countrywide network of speakers , these can be set up anywhere in the UK in response to demand .
4 Also on an international scale , the price of grain rose in response to demand , and this in turn affected wages .
5 The new line includes the first air-cooled machines in the C90 series , a two-processor C92A and a four-processor C94A , which it says were developed in response to demand from Japanese commercial users .
6 The new line includes the first air-cooled machines in the C90 series , a two-processor C92A and a four-processor C94A , which it says were developed in response to demand from Japanese commercial users .
7 In response to demand SCOTVEC has set up a working group of employer and college representatives to develop a new HND in Social Care Management .
8 The central aim of the study was to explore the nature of the overall service provided by the police to the public : ‘ policing on the ground ’ , focussing on everyday policing , and to describe the priorities currently being given by the police to the various parts of their workload in response to demand from the public .
9 However , in response to demand , an initiative was set up to distribute data from the 1981 Census .
10 The authorities are able to influence money supply by the policies examined in Chapter 17 , but also banks and other financial institutions have considerable scope for creating credit in response to demand .
11 Despite its widespread occurrence gold has always been scarce in relation to demand .
12 Effective though it proved , the device of holding down output in the hope of driving up prices brought with it problems not to be found in any economics textbook : the global output ceiling , if set realistically in relation to demand , can easily prove too small to be divided amicably .
13 The hiatus after 1986 relates to a crisis arising from a large volume of issuance in relation to demand at excessively tight spreads , although it was triggered by concerns regarding regulation of banks ' issues ( see Davis , 1989 ) .
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